By
Joris Evers
Thursday, June 23 2005 11:23 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39238546,00.htm
If your e-mail does not have a Sender ID, Microsoft wants to junk your
message.
Around November, Hotmail and MSN will flag as potential spam those messages
that do not have the tag to verify the sender, Craig Spiezle, a director in the
technology care and safety group at the software maker said Wednesday. The move
is meant to spur adoption of Sender
ID, he said.
Sender ID is a specification for verifying
the authenticity of e-mail by ensuring the validity of the server from which the
e-mail came. While the purpose of curbing junk mail may be laudable, the debate
on how to stop the tide of junk mail is still ongoing. According to Microsoft,
up to 90 percent of e-mail is spam.
However, critics say the spam-fighting technology is not an accepted standard
and has many shortcomings. Also, there are technologies, such as Yahoo's
DomainKeys, that compete with Sender ID, which includes technology
originally developed by Microsoft.
"We think Microsoft is trying to strong-arm the industry into the adoption of
an incomplete and not accepted standard," said Dave Rand, chief technologist for
Internet content security at security software company Trend Micro.
Microsoft's move increases pressure on e-mail senders to adopt Sender ID. The
technology requires Internet service providers, companies and other Internet
domain holders to publish so-called SPF, or Sender Policy Framework, records to
identify their mail servers.
About 1 million domains currently publish SPF records, Microsoft said. That's
a far from the 71.4 million registered domains worldwide at the end of last
year. Still, because some large e-mail senders such as AOL support Sender ID,
about 30 percent of e-mail today carries Sender ID information, according to
e-mail filtering company MessageLabs.
Criticism for the technology
Sender ID has not been a success
because it is not very highly regarded, said Ray Everett-Church, co-founder of
the Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail and co-author of the book
"Fighting Spam for Dummies."
"Microsoft has been trying to shove Sender ID down the throats of the
Internet community for several years now, to little effect," he said.
Microsoft's unilateral move may hurt Hotmail users, he said. "Sender ID isn't
widely deployed, meaning that average users are now at risk for having their
legitimate e-mail tagged as spam when they send messages to Hotmail users."
Experts say one of the problems with Sender ID is that it doesn't work with
e-mail forwarding services. The basic premise of Sender ID is to check if an
e-mail that claims to be coming from a certain Internet domain is really being
sent from the e-mail servers associated with that domain.
"If you receive mail forwarded through, for example, a university alumni
account, the Sender ID check fails," said Matt Sergeant, a senior antispam
technologist at MessageLabs.
The Internet Engineering Task Force, a standard-setting body, dissolved a
working group on Sender ID in
September. Still, Microsoft is plowing ahead with Sender ID, perhaps in a
last-ditch effort to make good on a promise by Chairman and Chief Software
Architect Bill Gates to can
spam by 2006.
"All domain holders and e-mail senders should be publishing SPF records and
planning to do that now if they want to improve the legitimacy of their mail,
plus protect their domain and consumers. It is the responsible thing to do,"
Microsoft's Spiezle said.
Turning on the filters at Hotmail and MSN will give e-mail senders a reason
to adopt Sender ID, Spiezle said. Without an incentive, many have said that they
won't publish SPF records, he said. "We're in a catch-22," he said. "What we're
trying to do is to do the right thing by giving everyone advance notice."
However, this Microsoft effort to push adoption of Sender ID is likely to
fail, certainly in with such a short deadline, said Jonathan Penn, an analyst at
Forrester Research. "Hotmail is in no position to dictate that organizations
adopt Sender ID," he said.
Adopting Sender ID or any other technology requires time and budgets, Penn
said. "Company budgets are on a yearly cycle and most of them have no money for
such a project this year," he said.
Microsoft argues that publishing SPF records is simple. It usually does not
require new hardware or software and the most arduous part is doing an inventory
of mail servers and the subsequent maintenance of the record, Spiezle said.