Spam is still growing--and costing
Computer users' inboxes continue to be littered with threats, nuisances and costly and unwanted e-mails--and there is no sign of this situation easing.
Volumes of spam e-mail are continuing to soar month-on-month and the levels of virus-infected e-mails remain constant and high.
According to figures from e-mail security firm MessageLabs, spam now accounts for around 76 per cent of all e-mail traffic. Mark Sunner, CTO of MessageLabs, described the growth of spam as a "constant upwards curve" which still shows no signs of stopping.
Given that situation it's unsurprising that a separate report from U.S. research firm Nucleus claims the cost of dealing with spam has doubled on last year.
The company claims the average annual cost per employee of dealing with spam is now $1,934--based on interviews with 82 Fortune 500 companies. According to the findings the average employee receives nearly 7,500 spam messages per year--up from 3,500 last year.
Handling this deluge of unsolicited e-mail reportedly costs employees 3.1 per cent of their working day, every year. In monetary terms that work out as £775 ($1,400) wasted for every £25,000 ($45,000) of salary. Across a large organization it will soon add up.