Trafficvance
DM Confidential Affiliate Newsletter and Deals
Newsletter and DealsContact USAffiliate TipInternet Marketing ClassifiedsAffiliate Newsletter BackIssuesDMConfidential SubscribeDMConfidential Advertise
ClickBooth
Confidential Affiliate Newsletter for the online marketing industry.

Subscribe
Features
Digital Thoughts
Trends
Affiliate Marketing Tips
Partner Marketing
May's Take
DirectTrack Aggregate Index
Privacy Flash
Press Releases
Search Engines
DM Pimping Cartoon
DM University
The Roman Column
Web Trends
Marketing
Public Relations
Spotlight On...
iLegal
SEO
Broken News
PHOTOS
Affiliate Newsletter
Current Affiliate Newsletter
Affiliate Newsletters
Industry News
Affiliate Deals Blogs
Advertise
Internet Marketing Classifieds 
Subscribe
Contact US 
Topics
Affiliate Marketing
Behavioral Marketing
Blogs
Bmay
Co-Reg
Conferences
Desktop Apps
DM University
Domain Names
Email
Gaming
General Internet
Incentive Marketing
Lead Generation
Legal Compliance
Marketing
Marketing Tips
Merger and Aquisitions
Mobile
Networks
Outsourcing
Press Releases
Privacy
Public Relations
Search
SEO
Social Networks
Tech
Video
Video Games
Viral Marketing
Web
Resources
 
Internet Marketing Resources
RSS
 
Internet Marketing RSS

Advertise with us

RocketProfit

CoverClicks

 

 


 

 

Email
 

Spam Profit Margin sux0rs?
by Jason Hahn

A team of seven researchers at the University of California, Berkeley and UC, San Diego got into the Storm botnet to get a closer look at how much money spammers might be making.

Their findings seem to show that profit margins for these shady dealings may not be that spectacular.

“The best way to measure spam is to be a spammer,” the researchers wrote in a paper recounting their infiltration of the network of millions of hacked computers.

The researchers were able to modify alter Storm’s command and control system to take control of 75,869 hijacked computers.  These were used to channel consumers to a fake pharmaceutical site and a fake e-postcard site.

The latter was designed to simulate the way Storm spreads viruses.

Both fake sites were neutered: the pharmaceutical site returned an error message when consumers attempted to submit their credit card information for payment, and the e-postcard site ran an innocuous executable file.

The researchers tracked how many of their spam messages reached inboxes, and how many of these resulted in purchases or computer infections.

During the length of the study, which lasted 26 days, about 469 million e-mail messages were sent.  Of the 350 million pharmaceutical-related e-mails sent, 10,522 users actually visited the fake site, and only 28 people attempted to make a purchase.

For those of you keeping score at home, that translates into a response rate of .0000081 percent.

The researchers said this response rate would have given them revenues of $2,731.88, or a bit more than $100 per day.

The actual Storm network may be raking in $7,000 per day, or more than $2 million per year.

The costs of these spam operations would make it more difficult for spammers to make huge profit margins.

“The profit margin for spam may be meager enough that spammers must be sensitive to the details of how their campaigns are run and are economically susceptible to new defenses,” the researchers asserted.

It was also estimated that the Storm network could take control of 3,500 to 8,500 new PCs every day.


Sources:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7719281.stm

http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/153575/study_viagra_spam_is_profitable_but_margins_are_tight.html

http://government.zdnet.com/?p=4175

Add to: Digg this Digg  | 

Jason Hahn
e: jhahn221@gmail.com

Share your Comments

Share your Comments

Name:
Email:
URL:
Comment

refresh image?
Enter Code

 

 

 

Hydra Network

ClickBooth

CoverClicks

Revenue Street

AdStation

Xorclicks

AdZacta

TrafficNeeds

GMBTrack

Market Leverage

TheBizOppNetwork

RocketProfit

SmileyMedia

eAdvertising


To Advertise in Digital Moses contact editor@digitalmoses.com

 

copyright © Digital Moses
The articles and opinions expressed within are those of industry professionals and do not necessarily represent those of Digital Moses LLC

 

 

Privacy Policy