Microsoft Corp. filed nine lawsuits against individuals and companies alleged to be involved in the distribution of spam, the company said Wednesday.Microsoft filed nine lawsuits against individuals and companies alleged to be involved in the distribution of spam, the company said Wednesday.The suits, all filed in the last month, include eight against individuals alleged to be behind spam campaigns that offered e-mail users a variety of products including generic online drugs, tee-shirts, software, pornography and dating services. The ninth lawsuit is against a Web hosting company that catered to the spammer community by claiming to be “bulletproof,” or incapable of being shut down, Microsoft said in a statement.The lawsuits are just the latest salvo in a legal war on spammers by Microsoft, as well as Internet service providers like America Online and EarthLink. In June, Microsoft filed eight lawsuits against alleged spammers who used accounts at the company’s Hotmail e-mail service and compromised PCs running its Windows software to send spam. In the latest suits, Microsoft has also extended its reach to companies that sell services to spammers, according to the statement.Microsoft filed suit against Levon Gillespie, who is described as a principal of “bulletproof” Web hosting company cheapbphosting.com, as well as “various John Doe” defendants who use Gillespie’s services, the company said. According to text Microsoft said was taken from the cheapbphosting.com site, Gillespie “cater(s) for both established bulk email experts and companies that have not used bulk email before,” using “China-based” servers “to ensure no problems arise from complaints generated by mail you send.”In its statement, Microsoft claimed that spam that originated on servers on the cheapbphosting.com was routed through compromised computers in Korea, Japan, Israel and the U.K., as well as Brazil, Germany, Switzerland, Canada and the U.S.The e-mail messages contained forged or “spoofed” header information to make them look as if they came from Microsoft MSN and Hotmail accounts, the company said.Microsoft said it has filed 70 lawsuits in the U.S., including the latest group, and is continuing to target spammers and those that support spamming. Related content news Dell provides $150M to develop an AI compute cluster for Imbue Helping the startup build an independent system to create foundation models may help solidify Dell’s spot alongside cloud computing giants in the race to power AI. By Elizabeth Montalbano Nov 29, 2023 4 mins Generative AI Machine Learning Artificial Intelligence news DRAM prices slide as the semiconductor industry starts to decline TSMC is reported to be cutting production runs on its mature process nodes as a glut of older chips in the market is putting downward pricing pressure on DDR4. By Sam Reynolds Nov 29, 2023 3 mins Flash Storage Technology Industry news analysis Cisco, AWS strengthen ties between cloud-management products Combining insights from Cisco ThousandEyes and AWS into a single view can dramatically reduce problem identification and resolution time, the vendors say. By Michael Cooney Nov 28, 2023 4 mins Network Management Software Cloud Computing opinion Is anything useful happening in network management? Enterprises see the potential for AI to benefit network management, but progress so far is limited by AI’s ability to work with company-specific network data and the range of devices that AI can see. By Tom Nolle Nov 28, 2023 7 mins Generative AI Network Management Software Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe