Is spam starting to decline?

Taking a look at our spam filtering statistics for the University of Washington’s main email services, the percentage of our overall email that is spam fell to 36% in February. That is the first time since July of 2003 that it’s below 40%.

While it’s too early to know if this is a trend or an anomaly, it’s one of the few hopeful signs of late.

But before you get too happy, realize that this still means we processed around 10 *million* spam messages last month, out of 28 million total email messages.

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2 Responses to “Is spam starting to decline?”


  1. 1 JIm March 16, 2004 at 8:43 am

    Hrm.

    What’s the change in overall email volume, though? Because it seems to me that overall email volume has increased dramatically with all the virus/worm traffic generated by the bagle/mydoom/netsky variants. Perhaps the percentage decrease could be accounted for by a corresponding increase in virus-related traffic.

    Or, to put the question more clearly: what is the raw number of messages in the categories of Spam, Virus, and Ham for the past three months?

  2. 2 Jim March 18, 2004 at 9:55 pm

    It’s probably a local feature in the general trend. I’ve been collecting data on incoming spam to several accounts for a couple of years now, and it still looks to be headed for the outer atmosphere:

    http://staff.washington.edu/jimfl/spamplot.gif


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