Suresh, thanks for your interest. I see you've had a lot of experience in 
fighting spam, so you must have known this. Yes, I know this spamming technique 
has been around for a while. But it's surprising to see that the majority of 
the ISPs that we studied are still vulnerable to this attack.  That probably 
indicates that it is not as widely known as we would expect. So I thought it 
would be beneficial to raise the awareness of the problem. 

In terms of more results, the paper is the most detailed document we have. 
Otherwise, if you interested in the data that we collected (which ISPs or IP 
ranges are vulnerable to this attack). We can chat offline.

Regards.
-Zhiyun
On Sep 2, 2010, at 8:19 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:

> Zhiyun, this is by far the most comprehensive paper I've seen on
> asymmetric routing spam .. a technique that's as old as, for example,
> Alan Ralsky.  So been around for about a decade.
> 
> Congratulations, great effort.  Do you have more results available (in
> more detail than were published in this paper)?  Should be worth
> seeing.
> 
> thanks
> --srs
> 
> On Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 3:29 AM, Zhiyun Qian <zhiy...@umich.edu> wrote:
>> Sorry for bringing this old topic back. But we have made some academic 
>> effort investigating the spamming behaviors using assymetric routing (we 
>> named it "triangualr spamming"). This work appeared in this year's IEEE 
>> Security & Privacy conference. You can take a look at it if you are 
>> interested (and feedbacks are welcome):
>> 
>> http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~zhiyunq/pub/oakland10_triangular-spamming.pdf
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)
> 
> 


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