KnujOn

KnujOn ("no junk" spelled backwards, and pronounced "new john") was a project involved in Internet security. KnujOn targeted spam at its root, attacking the illicit activities that spammers derive their revenue from.[1] To that end, KnujOn ran an automated spam reporting tool.

History

KnujOn was founded in 2005 by Garth Bruen and his father Dr. Robert Bruen. A multi-purpose software tool called KnujOn was presented at The Northeast Chapter of the High Technology Crime Investigation Association (HTCIA) in November 2005. That software, designed to filter junk mail and produce complaints that may result in shutdowns of scam websites, tracked Internet-based scams and built profiles of persons or organizations engaged in suspicious Internet activity by gathering and sorting large amounts of data.[2]

KnujOn.com collected spam samples from the public, not to build better filters or blacklists, but rather to use them for illicit site termination, to test the Internet's policy infrastructure, and gather important statistics. Their general goal was to target advertised illicit transaction sites and hopefully take the financial incentive out of the spam cycle.

As of 8 March 2018 the service stopped accepting new subscriptions and email submissions began bouncing. On 22 May 2018 the service was shut down.

gollark: Imagine using a language which enforces OOP.
gollark: Even humans who should know what they're doing seem to frequently introduce memory vulnerabilities into things.
gollark: Humans are inconsistent and unreliable. Borrow checkers are perfect flawless algorithms incapable of mistakes.
gollark: Well, you shouldn't love it due to Java bad actually.
gollark: HelloBoi's wise wisdom being wise as ever.

See also

References

  1. Garth Bruen, Dr. Robert Bruen. "Project KnujOn Revised Whitepaper" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  2. Laurie A. Venditti (2005-11-03). "Conference Overview" (PDF). The Northeast Chapter of the High Technology Crime Investigation Association (HTCIA). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-12-26. Retrieved 2008-05-23.


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