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India tops list of spam e-mail spewers

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India's weak laws and poor enforcement also create fertile ground for spammers, some said. The U.S. and Europe have prosecuted several kingpins, including "spam king" Robert Soloway, who pleaded guilty in 2008 to fraud, spamming and tax evasion charges, but India hasn't had a single conviction for generating spam. Nor is it even considered a violation under India's Information Technology Act of 2000.

This past week, a major spammer and botnet known as Grum, using "command and control servers" in Russia, Panama, Ukraine and the Netherlands, was taken down by Internet firms and online security companies. By some estimates, Grum generated 18 billion junk and malware e-mails a day, accounting for anywhere from 15 percent to 35 percent of the world's spam using a worldwide network of up to 120,000 infected computers.

Over time, spam is becoming more targeted, as are other forms of Internet marketing. And many have a cultural component, including solicitations in India tied to cricket matches, Bollywood stars, fake training institutes, matrimonial help and weight loss through ayurvedic techniques, Indian traditional medicine. They've also been getting more professional, experts said, moving beyond the traditional typo-laden Nigerian scams of yore.

As spam and its spinoffs become increasingly lucrative, the business is being taken over by sophisticated foreign crime syndicates that add it to their portfolio of drugs, prostitution and loan sharking, said Ghosh, with technically ignorant mob bosses hiring the geeks required. Symantec estimates that the profits from online scams are equal to the global illegal drugs trade of two years ago and growing.

When Shishodia sits down with a cup of coffee and her tablet computer to check her e-mail, she finds several e-mails telling her she's just won the lottery or offering to find her the perfect husband with the right looks, income and caste profile.

"What a pain to keep getting these," she said. "I am already married, so getting these is frustrating on a completely different level!"

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(Tanvi Sharma of The Los Angeles Times' New Delhi bureau contributed to this report.)

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