TY - CONF ID - www2009238 UR - http://www2009.eprints.org/238/ A1 - Goel, Sharad A1 - Hofman, Jake A1 - Langford, John A1 - Pennock, David A1 - Reeves, Daniel Y1 - 2009/04// N2 - We present a plausible path toward adoption of email postage stamps--an oft-cited method for fighting spam--along with a protocol and a prototype implementation. In the standard approach, neither senders nor recipients gain by joining unilaterally, and senders lose money. Our system, called CentMail, begins as a charity fund-raising tool: Users donate $0.01 to a charity of their choice for each email they send. The user benefits by helping a cause, promoting it to friends, and potentially attracting matching donations, often at no additional cost beyond what they planned to donate anyway. Charitable organizations benefit and so may appeal to their members to join. The sender?s email client inserts a uniquely generated CentMail stamp into each message. The recipient?s email client verifies with CentMail that the stamp is valid for that specific message and has not been queried by an unexpectedly large number of other recipients. More generally, the system can serve to rate-limit and validate many types of transactions, broadly construed, from weblog comments to web links to account creation. TI - CentMail: Rate Limiting via Certified Micro-Donations AV - none M2 - Madrid, Spain T2 - 18th International World Wide Web Conference ER -