Most of us think of “spam” as a relatively new concept, but the idea actually predates email by a good one hundred years or so. The first known instance of a mass unsolicited commercial message was in May 1864, when Messrs Gabriel advertised via mass telegram messages that their dental practice would be open from 10am to 5pm until October. In fact, up until the Great Depression, it was common for wealthy folks to be inundated with telegraphs regarding questionable investment opportunities.
Even so, a number of corporations were caught completely off guard in March 1949, when they began receiving unsolicited marketing messages from Pryor and Co. Office Supply in Milford, Pennsylvania:
GREETINGS. PLS ONPASS FOLLOWING MSG TO OFC MGR.
CALL PRYOR & CO OFC SUPPLY PE.6-6410 FOR PAPER GOODS – PEN – INK – RUBBER STAMPS. FREE CATALOG. FREE SHIPPING AVLB. STOP THROWING MONEY AWAY.
ENDS+
The messages continued to arrive sporadically over the next few months. Most regarded the ads as a minor nuisance, but for some, the messages represented a breach in security. The telex lines were meant to be secure, and the numbers to access them were supposed to be a closely-guarded secret.
In July 1949, TMX Magazine (an AT&T trade magazine named for the TeletypeWriter eMergent service) published an article about the incident, claiming the unsolicited messages were being distributed to as many as five corporations. The following month, they amended their story and said the number of folks on the distribution list might be as high as 30. Read more