Other Documents You May Find Interesting
Here are a few selected research reports, academic papers, and other public papers directly related to work at M3AAWG. These documents are either from M3AAWG or provided with permission from our industry associates and colleagues:
Cybercrime Supply Chain 2025: Measurements and Assessments of Cyber Attack Resources and Where Criminals Acquire Them
November 2025M3AAWG Position on Cold Email
November 2025The GDPR and ESP Suppression Lists
December 2024Cybercrime Supply Chain 2024: Measurements and Assessments of Cyber Attack Resources and Where Criminals Acquire Them
November 2024Cybercrime Supply Chain 2023: Measurements and Assessments of Cyber Attack Resources and Where Criminals Acquire Them
October 2023M3AAWG Present and Future of the Public Suffix List
April 2023M3AAWG Membership Value and Fact Sheet
Keys Under Doormats Tutorial
by report co-author Josh Benaloh at M3AAWG 35th General Meeting in Atlanta - October 2015 (posted with the presenter's permission)- NIST Email Security Improvements
by William C. Barker and Scott Rose at M3AAWG 35th General Meeting in Atlanta - October 2015 (posted with the presenters' permission)
SMTP Transport Security: Past, Present, Future
by Viktor Dukhovni at M3AAWG 35th General Meeting in Atlanta - October 2015 (posted with the presenter's permission)Operation Safety-Net brochure
describes the emerging threats and scope of the full best practices reportWhy India? An overview of the problem and the M3AAWG approach
4-Page white paper brochure on Indian service providers and the Messaging, Malware and Mobile Anti-Abuse Working GroupChina - U.S. Bilateral On Cybersecurity: Fighting Spam To Build Trust
Key Findings of the 2010 MAAWG Email Security Awareness and Usage Survey (Issued March 2010)
2010 MAAWG Email Security Awareness and Usage Report (Issued March 2010)
"Of Course, I Never Reply to Spam – Except Sometimes: A Look at Consumers' Awareness of Email Security and Practices,”
Part I (Research conducted for the Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group, 2009)- "Of Course, I Never Reply to Spam – Except Sometimes: A Look at Consumers' Awareness of Email Security and Practices,”
Part II (Research conducted for the Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group, 2009)
