Spam: Suppress unwanted content
During the war in England, 'spam' was the kind of food you could reliably get in any store: a nutrient chopped up from meat scraps with no taste value. This ubiquity and worthlessness is also what the term 'spam' refers to, as it is commonly used today for unsolicited mail in e-mail correspondence. It is the kind of 'waste' in the age of electronic mail that no one escapes completely - from supposedly ownerless million-dollar accounts in Nigeria to miraculous penis extensions.
A distinction must be made between 'spam' and 'malware': this is mail that carries spyware in its attachment, which can harm the computer or its owner when opened. With its comprehensive IT service, b.r.m. manages to dispose of the lion's share of annoying or dangerous mail in advance.