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CAUCE NORTH AMERICA NEWS, Vol 13, No 1, April 2011

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John Levine

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Apr 13, 2011, 12:17:08 AM4/13/11
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CAUCE

CAUCE News, Volume 13, Number 1
April 2011


IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHY YOU GOT THIS MESSAGE: Please see the "About This
Message" section at the end. See [1]our web site for the most recent
updates.
__________________________________________________________________

Welcome

Welcome to the thirteenth year of CAUCE News. CAUCE was involved in an
unprecedented number of important initiatives in 2010, which we would
like to take a moment to tell you about.

CAUCE participated in the Digital Phishnet meetings in Montreal,
Canada, was represented at the Anti-Phishing Working Group meetings in
Dallas, the Team Cymru Cybercrime meetings in Lyon, France, attended
all meetings of the Messaging Anti-abuse Working Group, was present at
Toronto's ARIN (American Registry for Internet Numbers) meeting,
several IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) meetings, and countless
hours advocating for the passage of Canada's Anti-spam Law, C-28, now
known as CASL.

CAUCE was instrumental in the development by the U.S. FCC's
Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council
(CSRIC) its Network Operators' Anti-botnet BCP document, providing
substantial input to the final product.

We thank all our CAUCE supporting and organizational members, whose
yearly membership fees allow CAUCE to function, to attend these
conferences, and to advocate on behalf of computer users who want to
see the fight against malicious online abuse come to a succesful end.
All CAUCE directors and officers are volunteers who give generously of
their time.
__________________________________________________________________

Facts and Tips for Consumers about the Epsilon Breach

Epsilon Interactive, who sends commercial email on behalf of hundreds
of companies, admitted to a security breach that they detected some
time in March. Journalists covering the story have collected
notifications sent by about 70 companies, including many financial
institutions.

If you received a notification from one of Epsilon's clients, the
thieves know your name and email address. Depending on which company
had your information, the thieves may also be know the hotels you may
stay at, which credit cards you may use, or where you buy stuff online.
If your email address shows up on several of these lists, the criminals
can draw together a pretty accurate profile of who you are, and what
you typically do, and can guess your income level. Ironically, that is
what companies like Epsilon do with the data, too.

There has been a lot of talk, blogging, tweeting and press reportage
about the Epsilon breach, but little in the way of concrete information
to consumers as to where they stand, if their personal information
(PII) such as their name and email address has been lost to criminals.
The CAUCE Board of Directors have developed the following FAQ that
provides facts and guidance for those affected by the breach

Read more: [2]Facts for Consumers about the Epsilon Breach
__________________________________________________________________

Impenetrable Processes and Fool's Gold at ICANN
By: J.D. Falk, Director-at-large

A couple of weeks ago, I attended part of the ICANN meeting in San
Francisco. I've been watching ICANN and been peripherally aware of
their issues since the organization began, but this was my first chance
to attend a meeting.

What I learned is that ICANN is a crazy behemoth of a bureaucracy,
steeped in impenetrable acronyms and processes that make it nearly
impossible for someone new to get up to speed.

The best example of this is the recent approval of the .XXX top-level
domain. There are already top-level domains for specific types of
companies or organizations: .MUSEUM for museums, .COOP for co-ops. None
of them have been very successful ? there are only a few hundred
museums in .MUSEUM and 6000 co-ops in .COOP ? but they've been mostly
harmless. So okay, the adult entertainment industry wants a top-level
domain, why not let them have it?

Read more: [3]Impenetrable Processes and Fools Gold
__________________________________________________________________

C-28 Anti-Spam Law Receives Royal Assent
By: Shaun Brown, Director-at-large

It's been a long time coming, but Canada finally has an anti-spam law.
Bill C-28, the law with no name, was passed in December, 2010

First introduced in April 2009 as C-27, the Electronic Commerce
Protection Act, it died when parliament was prorogued in December 2009,
only to be resurrected in May of 2010.

Having been involved since the beginning, and eagerly awaiting its
passage, CAUCE is excited and relieved to see Bill C-28 become law; it
provides Canada with the tools to do its part in the global fight
against spam and related threats.

Read more: [4]C-28 is the law of the land
__________________________________________________________________

Yes, People Still Care About Email Spam

Just over a month ago, we posted an article entitled "Do People Still
Care About Email Spam Anymore?". Part of the reason why people might
not care anymore, according to this article, is that email has become
pass?. With so many other new ways to communicate, why even bother with
email?

Not only did a few readers take the time to post some compelling
counter-arguments to our article, even muckraking marketing columnist
Ken Magill has weighed in on the debate. Citing a few recent studies ?
including a finding by the Pew Internet & American Life Project that
email is still the No. 1 online activity across all age groups of
internet users ? Magill goes so far as to advocate a pretty hefty dose
of harassment for the next person who states in public that email is
dead.

According to The Radicati Group, there are currently 1.4 billion email
users. A study by Nielsen found that 25 minutes out of every hour spent
on a mobile device is on email. And so on.

Read more: [5]Yes, People Still Care
__________________________________________________________________

About This Message:
This message was written and sent by CAUCE North America. It is
copyright 2011 by CAUCE North America, Inc.
Consider supporting cause by becoming a free or supporting individual
Member or an organizational Sponsor: [6]Join Here. Organizations can
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in our periodic newsletter. Please contact us via e-mail at
[7]sup...@cauce.org for additional information.
We encourage redistribution of this message, as long as they are not
spammed anywhere, are on-topic for any forum to which you send them,
and include our copyright notice. When in doubt, post the URL of our
site (http://www.cauce.org) instead, or put it in your signature.
Press, broadcast, and Internet media may treat this material as they
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__________________________________________________________________

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References

1. http://www.cauce.org/
2. http://www.cauce.org/2011/04/facts-for-consumers-about-the-epsilon-breach.html
3. http://www.cauce.org/2011/04/impenetrable-processes-and-fools-gold-at-icann.html
4. http://www.cauce.org//2010/12/c-28-the-law-of-the-land.html
5. http://www.cauce.org/2011/02/yes-people-still-care-about-email-spam.html
6. http://www.cauce.org/cauce/join.html
7. mailto:sup...@cauce.org
8. mailto:cauce-us-ann...@lists.cauce.net
9. http://lists.cauce.net/cgi-bin/mj_wwwusr?list=cauce-us-announce&func=unsubscribe
10. http://www.cauce.org/join.html
11. mailto:comm...@cauce.org

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