The Lumber Cartel was a supposed conspiracy that backed anti-spammers.
Somewhere around late 1997, some email spammers and people who sympathized with them started to develop a conspiracy theory, which was later brought to the attention of anti-spammers in Usenet. According to them, the anti-spam efforts were funded by several major lumber companies. The logic in that is that these companies first destroy the forests, and make paper out of them, which is then in turn used to send bulk mail. Since e-mail spam is almost free to send and doesn't use paper at all, the lumber companies obviously wanted to stop it before it would surpass paper-based bulk mailing, which, according to conspiracy theorists, was already considerably cutting in their profits. Spammers in general tended to say that one of the big good things about spam was that it was ecologically more viable, and that they were doing their part to help the nature.
Anti-spammers, of course, were quick to point out that this reasoning is far from truth. There are lots of reasons why e-mail spam was, and continues to be, a threat to the Internet, and why people continue to fight spam either on their spare time or professionally. Furthermore, lumber companies themselves have little to do with paper companies, and bulk mail constitutes only a small part of total paper use.
Anti-spammers started to ridicule the spammers for coming up with this conspiracy, and even formed a group of their own, known as "The Lumber Cartel". Many anti-spammers proudly proclaimed, in their email and Usenet signatures, they were part of The Lumber Cartel, a statement which was immediately followed by letters "TINLC" (There Is No Lumber Cartel).
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