Your SPAM Questions Answered!
Click on the question
links below for more information.
What is SPAM?
How did I become a victim of spam e-mail?
Why is SPAM so bad? I kind of like getting all those discount
offers.
How can I avoid getting SPAM e-mail?
What is
SPAM?
It's not just for breakfast
anymore! SPAM is a term commonly used to identify unsolicited
and often unwanted e-mail that mysteriously makes it way to your inbox.
The distribution of the same e-mail to hundreds, thousands and even
millions of unsuspecting users is called spamming. And those
individuals who force their message on people who would not otherwise
choose to receive it are spammers. top
How did I become a
victim of spam?
Spammers have many tools
and tricks that help them capture your e-mail address. Anytime you fill-out
an online form that contains your e-mail address or post a message to
a Usenet group you are taking a chance that someone may use your address
for their marketing purposes. Software is available to spammers that
surfs the web checking for html code that contains an e-mail address.
If your personal or business web page contains an e-mail link like this:
mailto:jane@ms.edu, you may be making it easy for spam software to collect
your address for its database. top
Why is SPAM so
bad? I kind of like getting all those discount offers.
First, you can rely on
the old saying, "If it sounds too good to be true it probably is." Often
times SPAM mail contains offers for get-rich-quick schemes, dubious
products and questionably legal services. Beyond that, some contain adult
themes and outright scams. A New York court recently ruled that spammers
would be subject to the same laws as those who commit postal mail
fraud.
Secondly, the cost that
is involved in sending out these advertisements is rarely felt by the
sender, but is most often paid by the one receiving the message they
never asked for in the first place. Here is how it works. A spammer
sends out a message to 1,000 e-mail addresses every hour. Five hundred
of those addresses are on the same ISP, let's say AOL. This means AOL's
server has to handle 500 more messages an hour than normal. This may
mean they must increase their hardware that manages the e-mail to handle
the extra load forcing the users monthly cost to go up. In addition,
if you pay your internet service by the minute, or have to pay a phone
toll fee while you are connected to the internet your cost may go up
even more. It takes approximately 10 seconds to identify and delete
an unwanted message, plus the time it took to download the message.
Multiply that times the number of SPAM messages you get per day and
see just how much these discount offers are saving you.top
How can I avoid
getting SPAM e-mail?
There are many online
resources for avoiding SPAM. Simply doing a search with the keywords
"avoiding spam" will result in thousands of resources. We've done a little
research and here are some of the best tips we have found.
Step 1 Nip-it in the bud.
Don't give spammers
a chance to capture your address. You might want to think about creating
a "dummy" e-mail account through a free service like Yahoo! . When you fill-out forms online
for free offers and to access free services, use the alternate account.
Many times these are free because they are selling your e-mail address
for a profit.
If your e-mail
address appears as a link on many web pages related to your work or
personal pages, you might think about changing that. Create a generic
account within your company specifically for inquiries from the web. You
might still have to wade through some junk mail, but at least it is not
tangled in your personal account. Many web sites are also beginning to
use e-mail forms rather than a link to someone's address. These are not
as easily captured by the SPAM software.
**Attention AOL
users: AOL makes it easy for spammers to collect your e-mail address.
Simply entering one of AOL's public chat rooms posts your username for
all to see. All the spammer has to do is add @aol.com and they have it.
Also maintaining a member profile makes it easy for someone to search
and collect your information. Best advice, delete your member profile
immediately.
Step 2 Don't make it worse.
Many
of these so called SPAM "newsletters" have links at the bottom of the
advertisement that say something like, "Click here to unsubscribe to
this publication." Most users are trusting enough to believe that if
they follow the directions they will be released from this unwanted
mail. The real truth is that on some sites when you try to "unsubscribe"
from one of these ads you are actually confirming the fact that your
e-mail address is a live account with someone on the other end. This
makes your address more valuable for spammers to sell to other companies
thus increasing your junk mail load. Don't feel bad, I fell into the
trap several times myself. It is very difficult to tell which sites are
truthful and which are not.
Read the fine print.
Most web sites that ask for personal information such as mailing or
e-mail addresses have a link on their form to a privacy statement.
Reading this may help you decide whether you want to give your personal
e-mail or an alternate address when signing up.
Avoid using your
personal e-mail account when participating in public auctions, bulletin
boards, chat rooms and mailing lists. Many of these sites post your
e-mail address for everyone to see or the automated web site creates a
link directly to your e-mail address which can be captured by spamming
software.
Some online
resources even suggest you change your return e-mail address in Internet
Explorer or Netscape to an invalid or alternate address. This way
spammers can't reply to messages sent out from your browser. This method
is problematic because it also sends an invalid address to those
recipients you actually want or need a reply from. To fix this, you will
need to include a reply address in the body of the e-mail
message.
Step 3 Do some research.
There are many other
resources on the web to help combat SPAM mail. Many instruct you on how
to complain to the company. Others offer software or advanced techniques
that protect your e-mail account. We are not recommending nor do we
support any of the following methods referenced, but want to make them
available to you for your investigation.
General Information
Sites
Stop Junk E-mail Web
site SPAM Abuse
Net Junk
E-mail Using E-mail Filters for
SPAM
Filtering Software &
Services
SpamDetective SpamBouncer Spamming
Software Resources SpamCop
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