Newsflash

US workforce has the highest percentage of mobile workers at 68% in 2006, accoording to IDC. However, Japan’s penetration rates will increase the most during the forecast period with mobile workers accounting for nearly 80% of the workforce by year-end 2011, up from 53% in 2006.
 

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The Cost of Spam E-mail
More than half of the two trillion e-mail messages sent in 2006 are likely to be spam. According to the anti-spam Web site Spamhaus Project, about 200 spammers worldwide are responsible for about 80% of all spam in Europe and North America. There are an estimated 2,300 spammers in the US. Spam is one of the costs one pays for being online. Most of us are prepared to pay that cost because the benefits of being connected to the Internet far outweigh this cost, but data from Consumer Reports' "State of the Net 2006" report puts some figures to that cost. Measuring spam, viruses, spyware and phishing, Consumer Reports estimates that American consumers spent at least $7.8 billion for computer repairs, parts and replacement over the past two years as a result of viruses and spyware alone. Add in the cost of phishing e-mail scams and lost productivity dealing with spam, and the figure is probably double.



So not only do consumers suffer the direct cost of spam, viruses and the other online diseases, but consumers also have to fork out money to inoculate their computers from these threats. Data from Arbitron/Edison Media Research shows "blocking software" is in use in almost three-quarters of US online households in 2006, which is a massive increase from 2003.


Spam will continue to be a problem for as long as some businesses see some value in it. According to recent news reports, a well-organized spammer can send between 60 and 70 million e-mails a day (two billion a month). On average, there is a positive response to 0.05% of those e-mails, potentially delivering 36,000 e-mail leads per day to the companies that use spam.

 
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