Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About Us :: Advertise     
The Industry Standard News and Analysis for the Internet Economy
NEWS
METRICS
BLOGS
JOBS
EVENTS
        Internet News for Internet Business Monday, 04th of April, 2005   

  TOPICS
Technology
Media
Money
Politics
Opinion and Blogs


  Newsletter/RSS
Sign up today for the daily email newsletter:





  BLOGS
Denise Howell
JD Lasica
Esme Vos
Scott Rafer
Ross Mayfield
Doc Searls
Seth Godin
Ashlee Vance
Matt McAlister
Tom Hespos
Mark Jones
Jen Muehlbauer
Cringe Worthy
Mark Frauenfelder
Declan McCullagh
Julene Snyder
Mark Glaser
Rafat Ali
Thomas Goetz
Mike Butcher
Jimmy Guterman

>> RSS Feed



  Archive

Recent Entries:
Few details in eBay's Shopping.com plans
Skype, VOIP handsets on show at Computex
Microsoft plans mobile e-mail push upgrade
EBay buys Shopping.com for $620 million
New .xxx domain will be reserved for porn



Previous Story: Cingular to begin offering GoodLink email service
Next Story: New .xxx domain will be reserved for porn


Yahoo and Cisco combine their antispam technologies
By Scarlet Pruitt

Yahoo Inc. and Cisco Systems Inc. are combining their antispam technologies to create a new e-mail authentication system, they announced this week.

The system, called DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM), will draw on Yahoo's DomainKeys authentication technology and Cisco's Internet Identified Mail. The technology will be offered to other industry players on a royalty-free basis in an effort to reduce the amount of spam spread across the Internet, the companies said.

E-mail authentication is important because spammers and online criminals often used forged e-mail addresses to send unwanted messages.

Yahoo's DomainKeys uses public-key cryptography to authenticate the sender of an e-mail at the domain level. The sending system generates a signature and inserts it in the e-mail header while the receiving system verifies the signature using a public key published in the Domain Name System.

Cisco's authentication technology also uses cryptography but associates the signature with the message itself. In its system, the sending server signs the message and inserts the signature and pubic key used to create it in a new and additional header. The receiving system then verifies that the public key used to sign the message is authorized for use by the sending e-mail address.

DomainKeys Identified Mail will combine aspects of both of these authentication systems. It will use the Domain Name System in the same manner as DomainKeys, to verify signatures using the published public key, but will also draw on Cisco's header signing technology to ensure consistency as messages are sent through the system.

It wasn't immediately clear how the new technology would fit in with the companies' prior work on authentication systems, however. Yahoo has already implemented DomainKeys into its Yahoo Mail service and offers the technology royalty-free to other industry players.

The Sunnyvale, California, Internet company said that it receives more than 350 million messages a day signed by DomainKeys, but did not say whether it plans to replace the technology once DKIM becomes available.

As for Cisco, it released an open source implementation of Identified Internet Mail late last year.

Posted June 2, 2005 03:54 PM |




FREE Email Newsletter RSS Feeds
Sign up today for the
daily email newsletter:








    ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:
    • Find reviews of digital cameras and download the latest graphics tools from PCWorld.
    • Astonish your colleagues with the latest technology news and trends from Computerworld.
    • Digital music that matters: chart-toppers and free audio files from Playlistmag.com.
    • Catch a daily glimpse behind the forces shaping the security business from CSOonline.com.
    • In-depth look at networking products, by Network World's team of independent reviewers.
    • Top reviews, analyses & evaluation of IT products by technology experts from InfoWorld.
    • Hot tech news with links to blogs and resources around the Internet on Lockergnome.

    MORE INTERNET NEWS LINKS


Home :: Newsletters :: RSS Feeds :: About TheStandard :: Advertise    
Copyright © 2004, TheStandard.com :: Terms and Conditions :: Privacy Policy