Spam 'produces 17m tons of CO2'
Apr 17, 2009
A study into spam has blamed it for the production of more than 33bn kilowatt-hours of energy every year, enough to power more than 2.4m homes.
The Carbon Footprint of e-mail Spam report estimated that 62 trillion spam emails are sent globally every year.
This amounted to emissions of more than 17 million tons of CO2, the research by climate consultants ICF International and anti-virus firm McAfee found.
Searching for legitimate e-mails and deleting spam used some 80% of energy.
The study found that the average business user generates 131kg of CO2 every year, of which 22% is related to spam.
Unwanted traffic
ICF say that spam filtering would reduce unwanted spam by 75%, the equivalent to taking 2.3 million cars off the road.
However, the ICF goes on to say that while spam filtering is effective in reducing energy waste, fighting it at the source is far better.
The report highlights the case of McColo , a US web hosting firm that had ties to spammers. The day after it was taken offline by its two internet service providers, global spam volume fell by 70%.
Although the respite was only temporary, McAfee said the "day without spam amounted to talking 2.2 million cars off the road" and that tackling spam should be part of the campaign to reduce carbon emissions.
Richi Jennings - an independent spam analyst who helped produce the report - told the BBC that the figures were based on the extra energy use spent dealing with spam.
"The PC on our desks uses more power when they do work, so the numbers are based on the additional work they use when dealing with spam," he said.
The Spam Report follows only a few days after Symantec's bi-annual Internet Security Threat report, which found that spam had increased by 192%, with bot networks responsible for approximately 90% of all spam e-mail.
Mr Jennings said that while McAfee and Symantec had different ways of measuring spam, he was in total agreement with the bot network figure.
"Our report was based on mail that spammers attempt to send, including ones that are blocked by an ISP at source. Symantec only measures spam that is successfully sent.
"The vast majority of spam is sent via botnets. We've got Conficker building a fantastic network and you can bet your bottom dollar that it will wind up being used to send spam.
"There is speculation that the botnet Conficker is building up is owned and run by the owners of another active botnet - Waledac, itself probably connected to the classic Storm botnet - and the theory is that the owners are keeping their powder dry at the moment and will activate it once Waledac goes down."
Source: BBC
- Categories
- Computer Games
- Digital Music
- Internet
- Technology
- Latest Articles
- Plan to monitor all internet use
- Microsoft sees end of Windows era
- EBay plans Skype public listing
- UK 'has the worst copyright laws'
- Computer viruses hit one million
- Spam 'produces 17m tons of CO2'
- Court jails Pirate Bay founders
- Win for UK story-telling website
- Dell's ultra-thin laptop on sale
- India plans cheap laptop option
- Related Articles
- Virtual Reality Golf Takes Off in Korea
- Spam plummets as gang leaves net
- Study shows how spammers cash in
- Ubiquity: bridging the gap between mind and machine
- Xbox 360 to hit 25m sales this month
- Indian space agency Isro to roll out a rival to Google Earth
- Britain 'leads digital TV uptake'
- BBC One and BBC Two to stream live online from next week
- Online time 'is good for teens'
- Age of Empires: Mythologies Ships to Retail Outlets Nationwide