T O P I C R E V I E W |
Carl |
Posted - 08/03/2006 : 07:14:06 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7-2294208,00.html
Pssst...it's Bilbo here. D'you wanna buy some Viagra?
Adam MacQueen
Why is your inbox full of offers for pills? Our correspondent finds the answer in The Hobbit Bilbo Baggins tried to sell me some Viagra last week. It was a surprise: J. R. R.Tolkien never recorded hobbits’ pharmaceutical pleasures as extending any further than a pouch of tobacco, but there he was in my e-mail inbox alongside an offer for “CIjALIS, AMBjIEN, VALjIUM, VjIAGRA”.
“When they had dried in the sun, which was now strong and warm, they were refreshed, if still sore and a little hungry,” one Mokosh Bauder wrote to inform me. “Soon they crossed the ford (carrying the hobbit), and then began to march through.”
Intrigued, I started paying more attention to the dozen or so spam e-mails that plop uninvited into my inbox every day. It wasn’t long before the Shire’s most famous son returned. Another pill offer was accompanied by the unlikely news that “it was in this way that he learnt where Gandalf had been to; for he overheard the words of the wizard to Elrond. It appeared that Gandalf had been to a great council of the white wizards,” while an intriguing message from a young lady planning to visit my area suggested she would be accompanied by a green-hooded dwarf by the name of Dwalin. At this rate I’ll have all 317 pages of The Hobbit by the end of the year.
The first “Hobbit spam” was sent in late May by a “zombie network” of some 150,000 virus-infected PCs which were taken over by a mystery spammer and have since been used to send out hundreds of millions of drug offers while their owners remain oblivious. This sinister method of distributing spam is increasingly popular: industry sources estimate that more than 80 per cent of all spam circulating in June was sent by remotely controlled PCs, an increase of 30 per cent from 2005.
This rise is a direct result of internet service providers cracking down on the popular method of setting up multiple “disposable” accounts using false contact details and stolen credit cards. In May a 21-year-old Californian hacker was sentenced to five years in prison for running a network of half a million zombie computers around the world. He wasn’t sending the spam himself — just renting his system out at $100 (£54) a time. You probably had some of his mail. Even worse, you might have sent some of it yourself.
So where does Bilbo Baggins come into this? He’s the latest ingenious method that spammers have found of bamboozling security software which does its best to filter out the estimated 68 million spam e-mails that are sent in the UK every day. This used to be a relatively simple matter — software just looked out for suspicious words and phrases like “porn”, “ free investment”, “reverses ageing” and anything that sounded a bit rude, and dumped them straight into the virtual waste paper bin.
Determined spammers soon found a way round that by inventing words like “pron” “secx” and the aforementioned “VjIAGRA” — which someone with too much time on their hands at the website cockeyed.com has worked out can be spelt 600,426,974,379,824,381,952 different ways while still remaining recognisable. This being a tit-for-tat (or t!t-for-t@t) kind of affair, software developers hit back by trying to second-guess the spammers, with the result first, that the Horniman Museum in South London spent much of 2004 unable to get any of its e-mails delivered, and secondly, that a new front was opened on the spam war — one that would ultimately see Mr Baggins and his dwarfish friends fighting a rearguard action against an 18th-century Presbyterian minister from Tunbridge Wells.
When his Essay Towards Solving a Problem in the Doctrine of Chances was published in 1764, the Rev Thomas Bayes probably did not foresee its use in the battle against unwanted penis extensions. In 2002, however, the internet giants Google and Microsoft decided to adopt Bayesian Probability as the basis for the filtering techniques in their software.
Rather than singling out individual words Bayesian filtering works on the principle that if the majority of words in an e-mail are ones that are commonly found in spam, it is probably a spam e-mail. Mr Bauder’s core message — “CIjALIS, AMBjIEN, VALjIUM, VjIAGRA” — would be identified with a 100 per cent hit rate. Add 37 words of bedtime reading and the dodgy word-rate goes down to a mere 9.8 per cent, well within Bayes’s acceptable score.
It’s not just The Hobbit, of course. Spammers can get round Bayesian filters by attaching strings of random words, giving rise to the phenomenon of “spoetry”, lovingly collected by bloggers worldwide. An English graduate friend of mine swore blind she had been e-mailed by Gerard Manley Hopkins when she received a Viagra offer accompanied by the verse “serpent melon ready-beaten five-figure/ horn chestnut self-occupied two-stream/ Non-Archimedean co-option black-visaged/ pier dam death-divided quinine herb”.
The Hobbit is at least an appropriate choice. The book documents how Baggins, proud to be one of the “plain, quiet folks with no use for adventures”, is approached by a mysterious stranger, the wizard Gandalf, and offered a place on a treasure quest that promises to be “very good for you, and profitable too, very likely”.
Despite initially rejecting the opportunity (“I don’t want any adventures, thank you. Not today . . . Nasty, disturbing uncomfortable things! Make you late for dinner!), he takes a chance and ends up not just a changed hobbit but the recipient of a generous share of a dragon’s hoard, gold, silver and jewels “quite as much as I can manage”.
There is the small matter of a magic ring that will require another entire trilogy to clear up, of course, but as far as the spammers are concerned, Tolkien’s message is clear — click here, type in your credit card details, and let Gandalf worry about the details.
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