spam

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spam

Computing slang
unsolicited electronic mail or text messages
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

spam

[spam]
(computer science)
Unsolicited commercial e-mail.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

spam

(messaging)
(From Hormel's Spiced Ham, via the Monty Python "Spam" song) To post irrelevant or inappropriate messages to one or more Usenet newsgroups, mailing lists, or other messaging system in deliberate or accidental violation of netiquette.

It is possible to spam a newsgroup with one well- (or ill-) planned message, e.g. asking "What do you think of abortion?" on soc.women. This can be done by cross-posting, e.g. any message which is crossposted to alt.rush-limbaugh and alt.politics.homosexuality will almost inevitably spam both groups. (Compare troll and flame bait).

Posting a message to a significant proportion of all newsgroups is a sure way to spam Usenet and become an object of almost universal hatred. Canter and Siegel spammed the net with their Green card post.

If you see an article which you think is a deliberate spam, DO NOT post a follow-up - doing so will only contribute to the general annoyance. Send a polite message to the poster by private e-mail and CC it to "postmaster" at the same address. Bear in mind that the posting's origin might have been forged or the apparent sender's account might have been used by someone else without his permission.

The word was coined as the winning entry in a 1937 competition to choose a name for Hormel Foods Corporation's "spiced meat" (now officially known as "SPAM luncheon meat"). Correspondant Bob White claims the modern use of the term predates Monty Python by at least ten years. He cites an editor for the Dallas Times Herald describing Public Relations as "throwing a can of spam into an electric fan just to see if any of it would stick to the unwary passersby."

Usenet newsgroup: news:news.admin.net-abuse.

See also netiquette.

spam

(2)
(A narrowing of sense 1, above) To indiscriminately send large amounts of unsolicited e-mail meant to promote a product or service. Spam in this sense is sort of like the electronic equivalent of junk mail sent to "Occupant".

In the 1990s, with the rise in commercial awareness of the net, there are actually scumbags who offer spamming as a "service" to companies wishing to advertise on the net. They do this by mailing to collections of e-mail addresses, Usenet news, or mailing lists. Such practises have caused outrage and aggressive reaction by many net users against the individuals concerned.

spam

(3)
(Apparently a generalisation of sense 2, above) To abuse any network service or tool by for promotional purposes.

"AltaVista is an index, not a promotional tool. Attempts to fill it with promotional material lower the value of the index for everyone. [...] We will disallow URL submissions from those who spam the index. In extreme cases, we will exclude all their pages from the index." -- Altavista.

spam

(jargon, programming)
To crash a program by overrunning a fixed-size buffer with excessively large input data.

See also buffer overflow, overrun screw, smash the stack.

spam

(chat, games)
(A narrowing of sense 1, above) To flood any chat forum or Internet game with purposefully annoying text or macros. Compare Scrolling.
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)
References in periodicals archive ?
For more detailed information on international e-mail laws, visit www.spamlaws.com and www.euro.cauce.org/en/index.html (the European branch of the Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail).
Most of the current bills create a level of legitimacy for senders of unsolicited commercial e-mail, because spamming would be legal until a consumer ops out, according to Ray Everett-Church, counsel for the Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email (CAUCE).
The good news for the developing e-mail marketing industry is that consumers can already distinguish between legitimate, permission-based commercial e-mail and unsolicited commercial e-mail, according to IMT Strategies Inc., a New York-based sales and marketing research and advisory firm.
They are plagued by a problem they think only Congress can solve: unsolicited commercial e-mail. The junk mail of cyberspace, known derisively as "spam," is increasingly clogging the e-mail boxes of the Internet's most active users.
* bar senders of unsolicited commercial e-mail from harvesting e-mail addresses from Internet sites
The House and Senate have passed, and at press time the president was expected to sign, legislation restricting unsolicited commercial e-mail, or spam.
A law passed by the state legislature (and awaiting the governor's signature at press time) gives district-court judges the authority to hear cases under the state's anti-spam law, which outlaws unsolicited commercial e-mail that does not show the recipient the true sender of the message.
Advertisers who send unsolicited commercial e-mail must identify it by including the label "ADV:" in the subject line of the message.
Keep spam, or unsolicited commercial e-mail, from wasting staff time and creating bottlenecks in your communication systems.
The Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail, an independent group of system administrators and Internet users who oppose unsolicited e-mail, has withdrawn its support from the bill.
This is why it's illegal to send junk faxes and why legislation is pending to restrict unsolicited commercial e-mail as well.