• Home
  • Insights
    • About Customer Insight
    • Ad Hoc Poll Results
    • Customer Insight
    • Green
    • Musings
    • Research Statistics
    • Top Performers
    • 495
    • RSS Feeds
  • Mobile UC
    • Mobile UC Business
    • Mobile UC Observations
    • Mobile UC Product Reviews
    • Mobile UC Service Reviews
    • Mobile UC Applications Reviews
    • Mobile UC Devices Reviews
  • Coms
    • IP Video
      • Video Conferencing Consultants
      • Telepresence Consultants
      • Video Conferencing Strategy
    • Applications
    • E911
    • Email
    • LANs & WANs
    • Messaging
    • Quality
    • Security
    • SIP
    • VoIP
    • VoIP History
  • Scores
  • Reports
    • Register?
      • Be Heard. Join our Panel.
      • Prize Winners Do Surveys
      • Unregister
    • Research Catalogs
    • Recovery Series
    • Collaboration
      • Exchange Review
    • Fundamentals
    • Messaging
    • Mobile UC
      • Alcatel-Lucent Users
      • Avaya Users
      • Cisco Users
      • Nortel Users
      • Product Manager's Guide
      • Siemens Users
    • Web 2.0
    • Pre-2007 Research
    • Comments
    • Brainshark Content Network
  • About
    • About Peter Brockmann
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • In the News...
    • Request a User Briefing
    • Request a Vendor Briefing
    • Full Disclosure Notice
    • Famous Brockmann's
  • David
Coms Email The Father of eSpam

The Father of eSpam

Monday, 17 September 2007 03:00 Written by Peter Brockmann
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

sendio-brockmann_thuerkAt Interop Las Vegas earlier this spring, I had the pleasure to meet Gary Thuerk, the charming former DEC marketing executive and posed for a photo with him at the Sendio booth. That's Gary on the left.

Gary is an articulate and spry retiree with a penchant for self-effacement and just call it like it is talk. His story about the first unsolicited marketing message (not really spam since it was quite appropriate and certainly well identified and therefore not anonymous) in 1978 that he was responsible is quite funny.

As part of the DEC team assigned to the ARPA (a Defense Department-funded advanced research agency), Gary wanted all 300 endpoints in the network to get the message about a new DEC computer that they could proudly purchase. Well, the issue was that there was no 'undisclosed recipients' and given the limits of addressing, half or more of the 300 addresses bled into the message field.

This made the message quite unintentionally illegible, and for some addressees, the message led to storage overload for the messaging application. The original nodes of the Arpanet were afterall multipurpose computers and not the specialized email servers that are certainly in regular use today.

< Prev   Next >

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Send
Cancel
JComments

78% of the Mobile UC panel rate Reliability as Very Important.

Related Report:  Beyond Unified Communications: How Mobile UC Changes Businessl

Login

  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
Follow us on Twitter

Posts: All-Time Highest Rated

  • Why Register?
  • Guest Blog: Convincing Business Leaders About The Green Value of Their Low-Carbon Products
  • Internet on Us
  • 10 Most Popular Blog Entries of 2009
  • Brockmann Guest Blogs for No Jitter
  • Cisco Cius
  • Swatting Is a New Dangerous Sport
  • Cost Saving Strategies: Why Video Managed Services?
  • Identity Thieves Masquerade as Job Sites
  • Video Conferencing Consultants

Posts: Year's Most Popular

  • Why Register?
  • Mobile Apps Are Addictive
  • Now, I Have Seen It All
  • Taxes and Telecommuting
  • Breaking News - Avaya to IPO
  • Android Users Suffer Security Problems
  • Google Removes More Mal-Apps
  • Innovations in Screen Technologies
  • Applying Email Marketing Features to Personal Email
  • Where Have I Been?

Reports: All-Time Most Popular

  • Forums in Small Companies
  • Forums in Large Companies
  • The Problem With Email
  • Video Communications 2.0: Tips for Improving The Experience
  • The Manager's Recession Survival Guide video

Reports: Year's Most Popular

(c) Brockmann & Company 2002-2011 Scroll To Top