Cutting
down on Spam
Try not to display your email address in public.
That includes newsgroup postings, chat rooms, websites
or in an online service's membership directory. This is a sure
way that you will just get hammered by webcrawling spammers
that mine addresses.
You may want to opt out of member directories for your online
services; spammers may use them to harvest addresses.
Check the privacy policy when you submit your address to
a website. See if it allows the company to sell your address.
You may want to opt out of this provision, if possible, or
not submit your address at all to websites that won't protect
it. Read and understand the entire form before you transmit
personal information through a website. Some websites allow
you to opt out of receiving email from their "partners" -
but you may have to uncheck a preselected box if you want
to opt out.
Decide if you want to use two email addresses - one for personal
messages and one for newsgroups and chat rooms. You also might consider
using a disposable email address service that creates a separate email
address that forwards to your permanent account. If one of the disposable
addresses begins to receive spam, you can shut it off without affecting
your permanent address.
Disposable E-mail Services:
- http://www.spamgourmet.com/
- http://www.spamex.com/
Use a unique email address. Your choice of email addresses
may affect the amount of spam you receive. Spammers use "dictionary
attacks" to sort through possible name combinations at large ISPs
or email services, hoping to find a valid address. Thus,
a common name such as jdoe may get more spam than a more
unique name like jd51x02oe. Of course, there is a downside - it's harder
to remember an unusual email address. Use an email filter.
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What Can I Do With The Spam In My In-Box?
Report it to the Federal Trade Commission. Send a copy of
unwanted or deceptive messages to uce@ftc.gov. The FTC uses the unsolicited
emails stored in this database to pursue law enforcement actions against
people who send deceptive spam email.
Let the FTC know if a "remove me" request is not
honored. If you want to complain about a removal link that
doesn't work or not being able to unsubcribe from a list,
you can fill out the FTC's online complaint form at http://www.ftc.gov. Your
complaint will be added to the FTC's Consumer Sentinel database and made
available to hundreds of law enforcement and consumer protection agencies.
Whenever you complain about spam, it's important to include
the full email header. The information in the header makes it possible
for consumer protection agencies to follow up on your complaint.
Complain to the sender's ISP. Most ISPs want to cut off spammers
who abuse their system. Again, make sure to include a copy of the message
and header information and state that you're complaining about spam.
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