- Press Releases
Many Companies Blame
Their Own Employees for Rising Tide of Spam
Results of Second Annual Mailshell Anti-Spam Survey
Show that IT Managers Have Little Faith in Either Bill
Gates or the Federal Government's Efforts to Stop Spam
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - February 23, 2004
- Does your IT department consider you a spammer? More
than 38% of IT managers consider any "internal mass
mailing from employees about non-business-related topics"
to be spam and 29% indicate that spam is "any email
you don't want" according to the second annual Mailshell
Anti-Spam Survey, released today by Mailshell, the leading
OEM provider of anti-spam software. Last
year's survey included responses from more than
1,100 consumers and its results were announced by the
Federal Trade Commission at its April spam conference.
This year, Mailshell surveyed IT managers at 699 separate
companies that use Mailshell anti-spam. Of those surveyed,
119 organizations elected to participate in the survey,
a 17% response rate. The survey was conducted online
from February 11-17, 2004.
The key findings included:
Summary of Findings
- IT managers do not agree on the
definition of spam. Despite the Federal government's
recent anti-spam law, corporate America's IT managers
definitions of spam vary dramatically from lawmakers'
definitions. The survey findings were as follows:
|
Percent Who Agree
|
"Which of the following would
you define as spam? Please check all that apply." |
|
99%
|
Random commercial email promoting
pornography, unwanted business opportunities,
etc. |
|
81%
|
Any email sent by companies with
whom you have no prior relationship. |
|
66%
|
Chain letters, virus hoaxes, etc.
sent to you by someone you know. |
|
59%
|
Any unwanted email sent by companies
from whom you have never purchased anything before. |
|
44%
|
Mass distribution of email you
don't want (jokes, political views, fundraisers,
etc.) sent by someone you know. |
|
38%
|
Internal mass mailing from employees
about non-business-related topics. |
|
29%
|
Any email you don't want. |
|
1%
|
Other |
- Even Microsoft will never figure
out how to stop spam. Despite Bill Gates' recent
predictions and vast resources, IT managers do not
believe Microsoft can solve the problem of spam. 81%
of IT managers believe that Microsoft will not ever
be able to prevent spam from remaining "a major
problem." Some had faith; 16% believe Microsoft's
efforts will be successful within five years.
- The new federal CAN-SPAM law isn't
working. 64% of respondents believe the law has
had no impact on the volume of spam their company
receives and 22% say the law has had "little"
impact. Many were skeptical that the law would help
before it had even passed, as 42% of respondents indicate
that the law's impact has met their expectations.
- Corporate domains are at risk of
hijack by spammers. 22% of respondents indicated
that their domain and/or corporate email addresses
had been used fraudulently by spammers.
- Viruses remain a greater risk to
corporations than spam. Despite the wild growth
of spam, 88% of respondents indicate that viruses
remain a greater threat to their network systems than
spam. Seven percent of respondents consider the threats
comparable.
- Companies worry about spam's negative
effect on employee morale. 27% of respondents
indicated this was the primary factor in their decision
to invest in spam-blocking software. Increasing employee
productivity was cited as the primary factor by 44%
and 23% cited threats to network security as the primary
factor.
- Employees' personal use of corporate
email exacerbates the problem of spam. 85% indicate
that more than 50% of their employees use company
email for personal uses. 76% believe that this personal
use increases their organization's volume of incoming
spam and 24% indicated that their organization has
disciplined employees for improper use of email.
About Mailshell
Mailshell is the OEM anti-spam leader. The company's
products include anti-spam software developer tools
and a suite of enterprise and personal anti-spam products.
The Mailshell Engine is the only anti-spam solution
developed explicitly to integrate spam-blocking technology
with common IT components, including security appliances,
mail servers, mail clients, anti-virus applications
and many others. Mailshell's software has earned an
"Editors' 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. For more information visit http://www.mailshell.com.
# # #
Contact:
Stefan Pollack, The Pollack PR Marketing Group,
(310) 556-4443, spollack@ppmgcorp.com
Back to Main Press Release Page
|