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Winning the War On Spam
For years I didn't worry much about spam. But lately it's got out of control. Over half of my email is now spam, and it was growing by the week - until I took action. This article shows you some strategies for winning the war on spam. How Do They Get Your Address? In the old days, spammers got their addresses mainly from Newsgroups - if you didn't post to Newsgroups, you were reasonably safe. But they're now using a much more efficient method to build their lists - email harvesters. Email harvesters are robots that roam the Internet collecting email addresses from web pages. Examples are EmailSiphon, Cherry Picker, Web Weasel, Web Bandit and Email Wolf, to name just a few. How can you protect yourself from email harvesters? By 'munging' (mung = 'mash until no good') or cloaking your email address. There are many ways of munging your address - the easiest technique is to use HTML code for the punctuation in your email address (instead of symbols). For the colon after mailto use : and for the @ symbol use @ and for the period use . . With this method, your email address would become: mailto:yourname@yourdomain.com but it will display as: mailto:yourname@yourdomain.com Your email address will appear exactly as it did before, and it will still be 'clickable', but email harvesters will ignore it and move on. There are also JavaScript's that you can insert into your web page that will make your email address visible to humans but invisible to harvesting programs. Here's one that works very well: http://pointlessprocess.com/JavaScripts/anti-spam.htm How To Fight Spam The most important thing is never, ever, reply to spam. Most spam contains an innocent-looking 'remove me' email address. Do not use it. Here's why: Spammers typically buy a CD containing a million or so email addresses, but they have no idea how many of those addresses are active. So before beginning their marketing campaign in earnest, they send out a 'test message' to the entire list. The test message contains an email address for removing yourself. When you reply to that address, it confirms to the spammer that your address is active and therefore worth spamming. Worse still, the spammer may be distilling from that CD a list of confirmed active addresses that he will then sell to another spammer. The key to dealing with spam is to report it to a 3rd party: (1) the affiliate program that the spammer is advertising, (2) the spammer's web host, or (3) the ISP the spammer used to connect to the Internet. When you report spam to a 3rd party, remember to be polite - they didn't send the spam and they're probably just as anti-spam as you are.
As an alternative to these reporting techniques, you could use a web-based spam reporting service such as SpamCop (www.spamcop.net). SpamCop deciphers the spam's message headers and traces the mail back to its source. Wishing you every success in the fight against spam! © 2002 by Michael Southon
This article was posted on July 31, 2002
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