A friend asked me: I don't get it. Why do spammers have such a hard time spelling
things properly? I get mail trying to sell me "viagggra", increase my "brest" size, or
save me money accessing "pr0n" sites or buying "seks toys". Even more puzzling,
there are plenty of spam messages where it takes me a few minutes to even figure
out what the subject actually is, with subjects like "sa vem oneyo n vviiiaaagra" or
similar. What's the story? Why can't these people use a spell checking program??
I have often wondered this myself, with spam messages like "YOU JUST WONT A
GREENCARD" (don't they mean "won"?), "Morgage ref id last opportunity" (don't they
mean "mortgage")? and, my favorite "earn a college degre instantly" (they
presumably mean "degree", but if they can't spell the word degree, how can I have
confidence in the legitimacy of what they're offering??)
But anyone who has spent more than about five minutes looking at the problem and
attempted solutions to spam knows why there are such rampant misspellings: to try
and sidestep spam filters. In additional to individual spam filtering systems, there
are now many Internet Service Providers who filter your email before it even gets to
your mailbox, weeding out the most idiotic and easily recognized of this junk.
Of course, if you are a physician and have patients who are concerned about that
Merck Vioxx prescription you wrote for them two years ago, it is theoretically
possible that their message won't make it to you. If you're a mortgage broker, well,
news of your competitors offerings might be something you do want to
receive. But overall, most people don't want this junk, so the people clogging up the
Internet with the billions of spam messages sent daily continue to try and sidestep
these filtering mechanisms, and the misspellings, typos, and oddly presented words
(like "0ffer" with a leading zero rather than "offer" with a letter o) presumably offer
some minimal ability to do just that.
The irony of all this, in my opinion, is that the more spammers try to do overt and
stupid tricks to try and sidestep the filters, the less effective their messages are.
They might measure 1 sale in 250,000 messages a success, but better targeting,
legitimate offers, well-written ad copy and genuine opt-in distribution lists might
just improve those odds quite a bit. And if you're selling something, wouldn't you
like to avoid having 95% of the Internet spontaneously hate you because of your
marketing techniques?
Dave Taylor has been involved with the Internet since 1980, and has written sixteen
different technical books. His latest projects are College Finances and Ask Dave Taylor, where he's happy to receive questions from readers.