Here is a quote, from what I got after typing "spam" in the answers.com search engine: "Simple math. Suppose that out of 2,000 spam messages, one person clicks the link, and the spammer makes $1. If a million spams were sent that day, the spammer made $500, and the job might have taken a half hour to set up. That means only a few hours per week could yield $100,000 a year. Is that incentive enough for high-school students, or would they rather go back to their paper routes? Of course, consistent revenues are not guaranteed, but some spammers make a whole lot more than $100,000 every year. In any case, there is ample motivation." In other words, some people, who get this spam DO check it out.
Bots created by people send email spam.
If many people report the spammer, there profile will be deleted on Facebook.
You can complain about corporate spam to the ISP of the spammer and to the FTC. It is a crime now to send too much spam. Send the entire email to FTC or the ISP.
Use a spam filter.
No, the Bing Rewards will not send you spam via the email mail phone.
Gmail Award is a spam mail being sent. It says that Gmail has selected you as candidate, please send your information. This is a spam being collected by people to get your details.
Becouse they are idiots
Spammers use clusters of hacked computers (a botnet) to send spam, so they can send loads of unwanted email at very little cost. There are spam affliate programs out there that pay spammers a share when some people buy a product after receiving a spam email, thereby generating an income to spammers.
Most people call it spam mail.
On the internet at forums the messages that people send onto the forum can be marked as spam. This means that they are inappropriate, go against the rules or that the are useless and without content. Most of the time it is the last case that is called spam. I think that this is the answer you were looking for.
Typically, the people you pay for your email are not the ones sending you the spam. Spammers are 3rd party entities who send spam to any email address they can find. ISPs and web providers can do little to stop spam, even for their premium customers. Sure, they can add a spam folder and some algorithms to move suspected spam emails there, but they cannot completely stop the spam.
Why would you even want to do that!?