Author Topic: Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006  (Read 168 times)

Wild_Elmo

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Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« on: January 23, 2004, 10:29:26 PM »
DAVOS, Switzerland - A spam-free world by 2006? That's what Microsoft Corp. chairman Bill Gates (news - web sites) is promising.

"Two years from now, spam will be solved," he told a select group of World Economic Forum (news - web sites) participants at this Alpine ski resort. "And a lot of progress this year," he added at the event late Friday, hosted by U.S. talk show host Charlie Rose.


Gates said Microsoft, where he has the title of chief software designer, is working on a solution based on the concept of "proof," or identifying the sender of the e-mail.


One method involves a human challenge, or requiring the sender of an electronic pitch to solve a puzzle that only a flesh-and-blood person can handle. Another is a so-called "computational puzzle" that a computer sending only a few messages could easily handle, but that would be prohibitively expensive for a mass-mailer.


But the most promising, Gates said, was a method that would hit the sender of an e-mail in the pocketbook.


People would set a level of monetary risk — low or high, depending on their choice — for receiving e-mail from strangers. If the e-mail turns out to be from a long-lost relative, for example, the recipient would charge nothing. But if it is unwanted spam, the sender would have to fork over the cash.


"In the long run, the monetary (method) will be dominant," Gates predicted.


He conceded, however, that his prognostications have not always been on the mark. Notable misjudgments include the rising popularity of open-source software, epitomized by Linux (news - web sites), and the success of the Google search engine.


"They kicked our butts," he said, while promising a better next-generation Internet search engine from Microsoft, due as early as next year.


At the forum itself, Gates announced a partnership with the United Nations (news - web sites) to bring computer technology and literacy to developing countries.


Drawing on a $1 billion Microsoft fund, the U.S. software giant will work with the U.N. Development Program to provide software, computer training and cash to establish computer centers in poor communities, starting with pilot projects in Egypt, Mozambique and Morocco.


Gates told a news conference the centers would not have to use only Microsoft products.


Egypt's minister of communication and information technology, Ahmed Mahmoud Nazif, welcomed the help, noting that about 500 to 600 centers have already been set up in Egypt.


Gates told the smaller group he thought Microsoft's team of software engineers was outrunning the hackers that have caused havoc by unleashing increasingly destructive viruses to attack networked computers. But he said it was tough to stay ahead. "If only the bad guys would just do the same stuff they did last year," he moaned.


While the Windows desktop operating system has become a "very powerful standard," he said Microsoft was more open today about its source code to allow other companies to develop competing products. That was partly due, he said, to the rise of Linux and antitrust actions in the United States and Europe.


Gates said he had not met with European Union (news - web sites) antitrust commissioner Mario Monti, who is also attending the forum in Davos, but would be willing to if it would help settle the long-running EU antitrust case against Microsoft.


EU regulators charge that Microsoft's decision to tie its Media Player into Windows, which runs about 90 percent of desktop computers, "weakens competition on the merits, stifles product innovation and ultimately reduces consumer choice."

   



They are threatening fines that could reach up to $3 billion, as well as a far-reaching order for Microsoft to strip the multimedia application from Windows to give rivals such as RealNetworks' RealPlayer or Apple's Quicktime more of a chance.

"We're doing what we can to come to some amicable settlement," Gates said.

After three days of hearing last November, the European Commission (news - web sites) is expected to issue its decision early this year.


 

LAZY

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #1 on: January 23, 2004, 11:40:25 PM »
off topic but me and my friend went to bill gates house, well about 100 feet from the gate and were standin there and were sayin oh hes prolly watchin us blah blah blah and we start walkin away and i hear a noise behind us at the gate and i look back and theres a guy lookin at us with a camera and this is at like 9 o clock and he takes a picture of us walkin away and he stood there watchin us lol
 

Eazy-E RuthlessG

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #2 on: January 24, 2004, 12:07:15 AM »
lmao was it bill gates or what lol weird shit and u must live in a rich neighborhood
 

LAZY

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #3 on: January 24, 2004, 12:23:05 AM »
fuuuuuuck no i dont live in a rich neighborhood, my friend had the car and he likes goin 2 places like that so we went there it was like a 45 minute drive from my house but he had 2 go 2 his work thats about 20 minutes away from bill gates house, and it wasnt gates the guy was too tall
 

Eazy-E RuthlessG

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #4 on: January 24, 2004, 12:30:57 AM »
ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ok man sorry  ;D
 

Trauma-san

Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #5 on: January 24, 2004, 05:02:08 AM »
Folks, pay attention to this man.  People might hate him (even though they've never met him) or we'll say dislike him because of the monopoly his company enjoys, but he's one of the most important people to EVER live, we won't see another Bill Gates anytime soon.  
 

T-Dogg

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #6 on: January 24, 2004, 12:56:05 PM »
Yeah well Bill Gates also once said (sometime in the 80's I think) that computers wouldn't ever need more than 256 kb's of RAM or something on those lines. So take a grain of salt with this.
 

OmNIsCiUs

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Re:Bill Gates says spam will be solved by 2006
« Reply #7 on: January 24, 2004, 07:05:44 PM »
that's true trauma... if he chose to he could buy an army bigger than united states'... makes ya think
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