Spam
has become ubiquitous - one of the facts of life, like taxes. Until
strong anti-spam laws are passed and actually enforced, spam
proliferation will continue because it's proven to reach a mass
audience. If it didn't work, spammers wouldn't waste their time.
Most people, however, see spam as the scourge of e-mail and look for ways to stop it from infecting their e-mail boxes.
There are several ways to block spam from your e-mail inbox. They say
prevention is the best medicine, so avoid giving out your e-mail address
to unfamiliar or unknown recipients. This has become very difficult to
do, however. Spammers can use software programs that troll the Internet
looking for e-mail addresses, much like throwing a net in the ocean and
seeing what gets caught in it. Nowadays it's almost impossible to shop
online without providing a valid e-mail address. Offline stores are even
asking for e-mail addresses in exchange for discounts or free
merchandise. Realize that what they are doing is potentially opening the
door for a flood of unsolicited e-mails. These organizations will most
likely turn around and sell their list to someone else looking for valid
e-mails. In these cases, it might be wise to have more than one e-mail
address, one for friends, family and colleagues and another for
unfamiliar sources. There are many free e-mail services in cyberspace to
choose from.
However, also know that even trustworthy sources
may be unwittingly shelling out your e-mail address. Ever receive an
e-mail greeting card? The sender has given your e-mail to an
organization that may very well be compiling e-mail lists to sell to
spammers.
A second way to stop spam is to use your e-mail
application's filtering features. Most e-mail applications allow you to
block specific messages. When an offending e-mail comes in, set the
filter to block further incoming mails from that sender.
A more aggressive approach to ridding unwanted e-mail is to report the e-mailer to the spammer's ISP.
This is not always an easy task. First you must determine the spam's
origins. Many of the bigger and more commercial ISPs forbid spammers
from using their services and, once discovered, will actively ban the
offending parties from using their services. But there are plenty of
smaller ones that do not. To find the spam's origins, instruct your
e-mail program to display all of the e-mail's header information. View
the "Received" lines, and working from top to bottom you can often
pinpoint the origin of spam. Spammers don't typically just send e-mails
from their ISP to yours; that'd be too easy and apparent. Instead, they
channel the e-mails through one or more ISPs in order to obfuscate the
origin, but each computer that handles the e-mail will attach a
"Received" line to the header. There are numerous Internet resources available for help in tracking down the source of spam.
Don't be fooled by phrases such as "to be removed from this list, click
here." Spammers use these types of catch phrases to entice users to
respond to the e-mails. The spammers may or may not remove your e-mail
from their list. Either way you have told the spammer that your e-mail
address is valid and reaches a real person. They know this because you
responded and asked them to remove you from the list. This can actually
be more valuable to the spammers because they can now sell your address
to another spammer with the assurance that the e-mail address is
legitimate. So you may have been removed from one list, but there's a
good chance that you will end up on another.
Yet another way to deal with spam is to
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