Sendmail has taken a first stab at software to authenticate the source of e-mail messages, a technology that will be key to preventing the proliferation of spam. The company released a module for its Sendmail e-mail server software that attempts to verify the source of messages to help Internet users block mail from unwanted senders. . . .. Sendmail has taken a first stab at software to authenticate the source of e-mail messages, a technology that will be key to preventing the proliferation of spam. The company released a module for its Sendmail e-mail server software that attempts to verify the source of messages to help Internet users block mail from unwanted senders. The technique is part of a developing Internet standard known as Sender ID. "What authenticating does is allow you to rely on who sent the message," said David Anderson, CEO of Sendmail, a maker of e-mail software. "We believe people will stop filtering out bad messages based on bad content and instead allow good messages with good senders." The majority of e-mail carried across the Internet uses the open-source Sendmail program, which runs on the Linux and Unix operating systems. The new module for the program allows e-mail administrators to modify their systems and add the authentication technology. The e-mail server will then forward messages with the necessary Sender ID information and authenticate incoming e-mail messages using the system. . Sendmail has taken a first stab at software to authenticate the source of e-mail messages, a technol. sendmail, taken, first, software, authenticate, source, e-mail, messages, technol. . Anthony Pell
Imagine being able to trace where your e-mail goes, and where it's forwarded. Say you had a way to verify that the CEO of the Fortune 500 company you've been hounding for a job indeed got the resume you e-mailed . . . . Imagine being able to trace where your e-mail goes, and where it's forwarded. Say you had a way to verify that the CEO of the Fortune 500 company you've been hounding for a job indeed got the resume you e-mailed him. Or that you could tell if your girlfriend lied when she denied getting your message that begged her not to go to that conference in Jamaica with her assistant who turned out to be rather hunky? Both scenarios are possible, thanks to services that track when and where e-mail messages are read without the recipient's knowledge. The technology has long been used by online marketers to determine who reads their spam; now it's available to consumers as well. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Follow the path of your communications and unveil engagement with sophisticated monitoring technologies. Explore their influence on confidentiality.. Email Tracking, Digital Communication, Privacy Tools. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.