ITU talks aim to kill off 'spam plague'

World's telco giants discuss plans to combat unsolicited email

The world's leading telecoms companies and ISPs will gather in Geneva next month to discuss ways of combatting spam.

Spam is a potential threat to digital services and "a significant and growing problem for users, networks and the internet as a whole", according to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).

Analyst Gartner has predicted that half of all email will be spam by 2004.

The ITU said spam "has grown into one of the major plagues affecting the digital world".

Anti-spam organisation Spamhaus, which has been invited to speak at the event, said it is a good start but warned that the current laissez-faire attitudes of the industry and European governments is harming efforts to fight spam.

"Even China (which ranks second in the world for sending out spam) is taking a stiffer line against spam than European states," said Richard Cox, a representative of Spamhaus.

"The US has weak anti-spam laws and is enforcing these as well as using other computer misuse laws. Most of Europe is only paying lip service to anti-spam measures."

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