How to Protect your E-Mail from S P A M

@ishqvishq (1021)
India
December 14, 2006 7:57pm CST
Imagine yourself preparing an important presentation. Suddenly, the Outlook Express installed on your computer pops up a message saying 'Buy Viagra for cheap' or 'Trying to sell you a business that pays you thousands of $$ every week'. Most Internet users are familiar with such unwanted emails in their Inbox. Lately, however, you must have noticed an increase in this kind of 'junk mail' to your your email address, or on your favourite newsgroup. These junk mails, also known as S P A M, are flooding the Internet with many copies of the same message, in an attempt to force it on people who would otherwise choose not to receive it. Most S P A M is commercial advertising, often for dubious products like get-rich-quick schemes. S P A M costs the sender very little -- most of the cost is paid for by the recipient or the carriers, rather than by the sender. Email S P A M targets individual users with direct mail messages. Email S P A M lists are often created by scanning Usenet postings, stealing Internet mailing lists, or searching the Web for addresses. Here are some tips and tricks to help you control the amount of S P A M you receive. How to eliminate S P A M: 1) Try not to display your email address in public: This includes newsgroup postings, chat rooms, Websites and online services membership directories. You may want to opt out of member directories for your online services -- S P A Mmers use them to harvest addresses. Also, disguise your email address when you post it to a newsgroup, chat room, bulletin board, or other public web pages. For example, use ankurjain_del AT rediffmail DOT com. This way, a person can interpret your address, but the automated programmes S P A Mmers use often cannot. 2) 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. Also, look for all the check boxes that have been checked by default while you fill and submit any form. 3) Use two email addresses: Try 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 -- this can be a separate email address that forwards mails to your permanent account. If one of the disposable addresses begins to receive S P A M, you can shut it off without affecting your permanent address. 4) Use a unique email address: Your choice of email addresses may affect the amount of S P A M you receive. S P A Mmers 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 ankurjain may get more S P A M than a more unique name like a11nkur2006jain. Of course, there is a downside -- it's more difficult to remember an unusual email address. 5) Use an email filter: Check your email account to see if it provides a tool to filter out potential S P A M or a way to channel S P A M into a bulk email folder. You might want to consider these options when you're choosing your Internet Service Provider. Do your part by keeping your junk email filter up-to-date. 6) Never hit the 'REMOVE' button: Most S P A M mail you receive contains a line that says 'Reply with subject line as UNSUBSCRIBE to remove your email address from our mailing list'. When, in fact, you reply to unsubscribe, what happens is that you simply verify you have a valid email address. As a result, you get even more S P A M instead of getting removed from the list. Some S P A M relies on generators that try variations of email addresses at certain domains. If you click a link within an email message or reply to a certain address, you are only confirming your email address is valid. Unwanted messages that offer an 'unsubscribe' option are particularly tempting, but this is often just a method for collecting valid addresses that are then sent other S P A M. Take, for example, the : URL: http://grz67. com/track/ rd/3964715/ 5751/23643/ 1934. This URL contains a tracking ID will be mapped to your email ID in the site's database. The S P A Mmers would be sending you email with this URL behind the link. Whenever the user accesses this URL, the S P A Mmer can be sure the email address associated with this tracking ID is a valid one. Many people have documented the fact that not only do 'Remove' lists not work, they verify to the S P A Mmer that your e-mail address is good. The S P A Mmer then puts it on a premium CD and sell it to the next S P A Mmer for even more money. 7) Be responsible and considerate as a user: We ourselves promote S P A M in some way or the other. Some people consider email forwards a type of S P A M, so be selective with the messages you redistribute. Don't forward every message to everyone in your address book. If someone asks that you not forward messages to him or her, respect their request. 8) Keep your antivirus programs updated: S P A M is a cat-and-mouse game, with S P A Mmers working relentlessly to outwit the filters. There have been some viruses reported, which help in S P A Mming by sending a pre-set mail to all your Outlook contacts using your email address. When the recipients open their mail, their system also gets infected and mails are sent from their system to all the contacts in their address books. So, by keeping your antivirus programme updated, you can detect these viruses, stop their entry into your computer and prevent S P A Mming from your mailbox. Coming Next Dont Trust your PCI Create a Backup
3 responses
@lovedude (4447)
• India
10 Jan 07
Thanks for your information.. I wish it will be useful to all
@ownado (1679)
• Portugal
7 Jan 07
That are useful points, I already follow them... anyway I don't have to worry much about spam because 1ยบ I don't share my e-mail in public and then Gmail has a great spam filter in my point of view so I don't have to worry.
• Canada
15 Dec 06
Yaa, I didn't take those steps...I had to give up my MSN first, then my yahoo because of spam. If you liked my post, press the "+" button to the right of this post. Thanks!