Reclaim Your Inbox:
Strategies to Slow the Flow of Spam Mail
When you open your inbox do
you find that it is full of junk mail? Here are some tips and
information that will help reduce the amount of spam (unwanted
junk e-mail) arriving in your inbox.
What is spam?
Spam is
UCE - unsolicited commercial e-mail. Or any e-mail sent to your
e-mail address that you did not request, from somebody that you
did not have a prior association with. They do not have your
permission to send you advertising by e-mail and you did not
ask to be added to their mailing list. Spam is usually sent to
thousands of people at once. According to Sero-Group.com, the
first report of spamming occurred on 1 May 1978 by a computer
sales representative in the US, but the term spam was not used
until April 1994 when two US lawyers tried to promote an
illegal lottery.
Why is it called
spam?
The name
spam was derived from a Monty Python comedy show which depicted
a restaurant serving Spam (the canned ham variety) as a side
dish to every item on the menu. This indicated that you would
be receiving something whether you wanted it or not. Hence the
term spam applying to unwanted junk e-mails.
How do spammers get your
e-mail address?
Typically
spammers use software programs that scan web pages and
newsgroups for any word or piece of text that contains an '@'
symbol. This is commonly referred to as harvesting. The
software collects these addresses and stores them in databases
on the spammer's computer, which the spammer then loads into a
bulk-mailing program used to send out the spam
messages.
Open an extra e-mail
account
Use a
free e-mail account for junk (signing up for newsletters, free
offers, downloads). Some sites that provide this type of
service are Hotmail.com, Yahoo.com and GMail.com. There are
hundreds of others so be sure to compare their features and
select the one that will suit your needs. If the amount of spam
starts to get out of control you can start a new free account
and cancel the over-spammed one. Only give your personal e-mail
address, the one supplied by your ISP, to friends and
relatives.
Add some
blanks
Another method is to insert blank
spaces before and after the '@' symbol in your e-mail address.
Place a small note under it instructing visitors to copy and
paste the address into a new message and remove the blank
spaces before sending their message to you. This won't allow
the e-mail address to be clicked like a normal e-mail link, but
the principle is easy enough for anyone to follow (this is
commonly called a munged address).
Do not
respond
Never reply to or buy anything
offered in a spam message. You don't want the spammer to know
that you have received their message as this will only
encourage them to continue sending spam, and it will also keep
your e-mail address as 'current and deliverable' on their
mailing list. Do not click any unsubscribe links in a spam
message. Most of these links are false or will again confirm to
the spammer that a live person owns that e-mail
address.
Set up real
mailboxes
If you have your own web site and
domain name never use a catch-all e-mail configuration. A
catch-all setup will effectively catch-all e-mails that are
sent to that domain, even if they are not addressed correctly,
for example joohn@yourdomain.com, and will forward all e-mail
to a nominated e-mail address, usually your ISP account.
Spammers will simply make up different e-mail addresses at your
domain and see if they are deliverable. If so, they will add
these addresses to their mailing lists (many of which are sold
to other spammers).
Be careful with spam filters
If you or your ISP uses a spam filter make
sure you add all wanted e-mail addresses to your white list (a
list of acceptable senders). The spam filter will then allow
e-mails from these addresses to reach your inbox.
IMediaConnection.com states that spam filters are currently
blocking approximately 38% of all wanted e-mail
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