In message <20210218200036.066496E3600F@ary.qy>, "John Levine" <johnl@taugh.com> wrote:
Report web forms are out of the question because they do not scale. I send about a hundred abuse reports a day about spam received from all over the Internet, and I have no interest in using your form or anyone else's to make a manual special case for under 1% of my reports.
I'm real glad that John posted the above comment, as he has saved me from having to do so myself. (But I will take this opportunity to elaborate on what John said anyway.) I am in 1000% agreement with John on this. Abuse reporting forms do not scale... at least not for the *victims* of the abuse. I report email spams... by far the most common form of network abuse... to dozens of different providers every week. At the moment in time when I send each of these reports, I have already been abused by each of these providers. (I hold them responsible because they obviously fail to have in place contractual clauses that would persuasively deter this behavior on the part of their customers.) To make me "jump through the hoops" of first even just *finding* each provider's unique abuse reporting web form, and then navigating it sufficiently well to insure that I have dotted all of the i's and crossed all of the t's, as required, uniquely, for each different provider, just *adds* injury to the insult that I have already suffered at the hands of these same providers, and these same networks. The demand to use a web-based reporting form is itself a form of cost shifting. It shifts more of the costs of dealing with network abuse onto the victims of abuse and away from the providfers that are actually originating the abuse in the first place. In that sense it is arguably the same as spam itself. Email spam only exists because it is a way of shifting the costs of advertising onto the recipient and away from the senders. Likewise, demanding that I must find my way to, and then properly complete *your* unique web reporting form is yet another way of shifting the costs of dealing with *your* abuse of *my* inbox away from yourself and onto me. Sure, it is maximally convenient FOR YOU, but how about a little more consideration for the victim? As John and others have noted, if I take up *my* time and effort to report to you abuse that is coming from *your* network, then I am NOT doing that for *my* benefit. Rather all of the benefits of abuse reports flow to the network operator of the network where the abuse originated. I am not an imbecile, and I can easily enough block any arbitrary sender in my own local configuration, either by full email address, or by domain name, or by IP address range. Thus, nothing obligates me to report any spam, and I can easily enough prevent myself from gettting spammed twice or more from the same source. So how does it benefit *me* as a spam recipient, or send in a spam report? The answer is that it doesn't. Period, full stop. I only do it out of a sense of community responsibility, i.e. to do my part to help pick up trash that other people leave lying around on the Internet. In an ideal world the networks/providers who are the recipients of my spam reports would be greatful for my help in truing to keep their networks clean, EVEN TO THE POINT WHERE THEY SHOULD PAY ME OUT OF GRATITUDE upon receiving any professionally prepared report from me. But they don't. (Sigh.) At the very least they should have the minimal courtesy and respect to not make the task of sending them a report more cumbersome and more tedious than it needs to be. Web reporting forms do the exact opposite, and they are thus every bit as anti-social as spam itself. Regards, rfg P.S. Some providers try to justify or excuse their clearly anti-social demand that everyone reporting abuse to them must use a web form by claiming that they get too abuse many reports, on a regular basis, to allow them to do anything sane or useful with such reports UNLESS they come to them via a web form. This is 1000% bullshit, and it indicates two things: 1) The provider in question is a perfectly lousy coder and is thus unable and/or unwilling to write code to parse emailed abuse reports. And anyway, don't actual human beings need to look at these things, in the end, in order to be able to react to each of them properly and in a professional fashion? If so, then how does the additional automation of a web form even provide any real or useful service to *either* the originator of an abuse report *or* to the sender of such a report? It doesn't, clearly. It is just a way of maximally inconveniencing the originators of abuse reports, and thus to quite apparently deter them from reporting AT ALL. In fact, for me, any time a provider says to me "Oh, you need to use our web form to report that" I take any such statement as a nearly 100% reliable indicator that the provider/network in question is going to be routing whatever I submit directly to /dev/null. Any provider that is making *any* attempt to "automate" abuse handling is, by definition, trying to *avoid* having any human ever look at abuse reports. And it logically follows that any provider that is trying its best to AVOID looking at abuse reports will NEVER have a human look at any such, which in turn clearly implies that no abuse report will ever be actioned by that provider in any way. (Example: Digital Ocean. But I can easily cite many many more.) 2) More importantly, it speaks volumes about the provider in question when and if he/she/it claims that they are receiving "too many reports" on a regular basis to allow them to be handled via email, rather than via a web form. To any and all such providers, I have a stock reply: Oh really? A provider that is routinely receiving so many abuse reports that it can barely keep up with them all has bigger problems that just the manner in which abuse reports are received.