- Press Releases
Results of the SpamCatcher
Attitude Survey
SANTA CLARA, CA - April 30, 2003 - The
SpamCatcher Attitude Survey was conducted by
Mailshell in March of 2003 and includes data from more
than 1,000 respondents. The survey solicited responses
from 9,321 users of Mailshell's anti-spam service and
yielded 1,118 responses, a 12% response rate. The survey
was conducted online.
• Summary
of Findings
• Raw Scores and Responses
Summary of Findings
- There is no clear definition
of spam. Consumers' definitions of spam differ
dramatically from marketers', service providers' and
legislators' definitions of spam. It will be difficult
for all constituencies to agree on a solution until
the problem is more clearly defined.
|
Percent Who Agree
|
"Which of the following would
you define as spam? Please check all that apply." |
|
97%
|
"Random commercial email promoting
pornography, unwanted business opportunities,
etc." |
|
88%
|
"Any email sent by any company
with whom you have no prior relationship." |
|
59%
|
"Chain letters, virus hoaxes, etc.
sent to you by someone you know." |
|
53%
|
"Any unwanted email sent by companies
from whom you have purchased something before." |
|
44%
|
"Mass distribution of any email
you don't want (jokes, political views, fundraisers,
etc.) sent by someone you know." |
|
33%
|
"Any email that you don't want." |
|
5%
|
"Other" |
- People still purchase products
promoted via spam, making spamming profitable.
More than 8% of respondents admitted that they have
actually purchased a product promoted to them via
spam. Given the low cost of sending spam, and the
surprisingly high purchase rate among these tech-savvy
users, it's not surprising that spamming thrives.
- Consumers make themselves
targets for spam. Although more than 50% of respondents
believe that, "my own behavior online affects the
volume of spam I'm currently receiving", a shocking
28% admit that they have replied to spam, thereby
making themselves likely targets for future spamming.
- Many people blame their ISPs
for spam. 48% agree, "My ISP is capable of doing
more to reduce spam but is not willing to do so".
Even worse, 57% of respondents don't trust their ISP;
20% 'agree' and 37% are 'not certain' that "my ISP
sells my email address and is therefore responsible
for some of the spam I get."
- Spam is more than a nuisance.
23% of respondents say that their computer has been
infected with "a virus, worm, tracking device or other
invasive code via spam."
- Many people do not believe
that anti-spam legislation would help. Only 62%
agree, "making spam illegal would really help reduce
the problem."
 |
SpamCatcher Attitude
Survey - Raw Scores and Responses
Survey conducted online, during March 2003.
• Total queries = 9,321
• Total respondents = 1,118
• Response rate = 11.99%
• Numbers below in RED
indicate percent responses and actual number of responses.
- Which of the following would
you define as spam? Please check all that apply:
| 97%
(1,085) |
Random commercial email promoting
pornography, unwanted business opportunities,
etc. |
| 88%
(986) |
Any email sent by any company
with whom you have no prior relationship. |
| 53%
(591) |
Any unwanted email sent by companies
from whom you have purchased something before. |
| 59%
(661) |
Chain letters, virus hoaxes,
etc. sent to you by someone you know. |
| 44%
(495) |
Mass distribution of any email
you don't want (jokes, political views, etc.),
sent by someone you know. |
| 33%
(368) |
Any email that you don't want. |
| 5%
(53) |
Other. |
- Have you ever purchased a
product promoted to you via spam?
| 8%
(92) Yes |
92% (1026)
No |
- How often have you opened
a spam message?
| 7% (76)Frequently |
6% (65)
Often |
22% (246)
Sometimes |
54% (605)
Rarely |
11% (130)
Never |
- Have you ever sent a reply
to a spam message?
| 28%
(315) Yes |
72% (802)
No |
- My computer has been infected
with a virus, worm, tracking device or other invasive
code via spam.
| 23%
(258) Yes |
51%
(572) No |
26% (289)
I'm not certain |
- I believe that my own behavior
online affects the volume of spam I'm currently receiving.
| 50%
(566) Agree |
26%
(286) Disagree |
24% (265)
Not certain |
- I believe that my ISP is capable
of doing more to reduce spam but is not been willing
to do so.
| 48%
(533) Agree |
16%
(181) Disagree |
36% (401)
Not certain |
- I believe that my ISP sells
my email address and is therefore responsible for
some of the spam I get.
| 20%
(229) Agree |
43%
(478) Disagree |
37% (411)
Not certain |
- The press exaggerates the
problem of spam.
| 8%
(86) Agree |
79%
(883) Disagree |
13% (149)
Not certain |
- Making spam illegal would
really help reduce the problem.
| 62%
(693) Agree |
16%
(179) Disagree |
22% (246)
Not certain |
About Mailshell
Mailshell is the creator of the SpamCatcher Engine,
the easiest solution to spam. The company's products
include anti-spam software developers' tools and a suite
of enterprise and personal anti-spam products. Mailshell
recently earned an "Editor's Choice" award in PC Magazine's
review of spam filters, and has been dubbed "priceless"
by Forbes magazine, "excellent" by the Associated Press
and "easy to use" by CNET.
# # #
Contact:
Stefan Pollack, The Pollack PR Marketing Group,
(310) 556-4443, spollack@ppmgcorp.com
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