The portal, which aims to educate internet providers about fighting spam, has
been in beta since last year and is one of several efforts by Microsoft to fight
the volume of spam that reaches users' inboxes.
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Microsoft has previously promised to filter out 98 to 99 per cent of all spam
by June 2006.
The anti-spam initiative is centred around Microsoft's
Sender
ID technology. In an effort to weed out forged sender addresses, the
technology checks whether an email's sender matches the corresponding internet
protocol (IP) address.
Spammers often use a forged 'From' address to hide their identity and sneak
past spam filters. Sender ID works on the basis that it is much harder to spoof
an IP address than it is to spoof an email address.
The technology requires domain owners to publish so-called
Sender Policy Framework
(SPF) records, a list of IP addresses used to send email.
Spam filter developers such as
Symantec and
Sendmail as well as
Microsoft's Hotmail service support the technology.
About 2.2 million internet domains currently publish SPF records, and
Microsoft claimed that more than 100 of the world's largest companies adhere to
the standard.
Of the two billion email messages sent every day, 3.3 million are SPF
compliant. Spam comprises roughly 70 to 80 per cent of global email traffic.
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