Revenge is a Dish Best Served with Spam
This morning, I opened up my email and surfed through a mailing list I frequent. I was surprised to find a spam email waiting for me in the folder:
Subject: ADV: Enjoy a spam-free inboxYou may remember recently sending an email to a Spam Arrest customer,
and receiving a response asking you to visit our website and type in
a word that was shown to you in a picture.It was pretty easy, wasn’t it?
Did you know that that one simple step stops virtually all spam from
entering our customers’ inboxes?You too can enjoy the benefits of a spam-free inbox.
We are so confident you’ll like our product, that we’d like to offer
you a 30-Day free trial. If you are un-satisfied for any reason, just
cancel your account before the end of the trial and you’ll pay nothing.Click here to visit our website and start your trial:
http://spamarrest.com/affl?1980401
Spam Arrest
Take control of your inbox!
Yes, that's right -- An unsolicited email advertising a spam-trapping service.
The reason I received this email is because one of the subscribers to the mailing list had subscribed to SpamArrest's service. Because I got annoying messages every time I mailed the list asking me to "validate myself", I eventually succumbed and went through the validation process. And because I validated myself, SpamArrest now think I'm fair game to receive their advertising messages.
I emailed spamarrest at privacy@spamarrest.com, ccing pr@spamarrest.com for good measure:
In what way, shape or form, exactly, does this comply with your posted Privacy Policy?I am absolutely sickened that an “anti-spam company”, of all people, is
spamming “passers-by”.I did not opt-in for your publicity material.
Kindly explain your actions before I start publicizing this case more. (I
think CNet and Wired News would love to make a story out of this)rOD.
(I actually notified Wired News and CNet immediately. Ironically, two CNet journalists use SpamArrest's service, so I got two "please verify yourself" messages back. Needless to say, I didn't follow through.)
At 1.30pm, I received the following response:
Rod,Our privacy policy states that we are allowed to contact “senders”, that is,
the people who send our customers email.Please refer the section entitled “HOW DO WE USE THE PERSONAL INFORMATION WE
COLLECT?”.You may use the opt-out link in the email, or visit
http://spamarrest.com/optout to remove yourself from receiving future
promotional emails from us.Daryn
Spam Arrest
Fair enough -- In summary, "If you email one of our customers, we are allowed to spam you". So I replied:
Dear Daryn,In accordance with my posted privacy policy at
http://arsecandle.org/~rod/daryn.html I will now start forwarding spam I
receive to you.I hope you enjoy it.
Love and hugs,
rOD.
Daryn has since received a copy of every spam I have received for the month of February so far. That's approximately 450 spams. And he's been added to my reporting scripts for any spams I receive from here on in.
Awaiting further developments.
UPDATE: 16:09pm Read up on what happened next.