Archive for the ‘SPAM’ Category

Protect Your Email ID from Spammers?

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

You must be digit of them experiencing a lot of unwanted emails flooding into your mail box every day. It is annoying, and a “daily” problem for many.

How do the spammers find your email? They can find your telecommunicate come either in the book of a web page or in a mailto link. The spammers enjoy harvesting the emails and finally those emails are spammed with junk mails.

I came to undergo about some ultimate methods to protect our telecommunicate IDs from spammers, which I hope haw be of some help to you too.

1. While leaving your telecommunicate come on the web page or on a book communication or on a discussion board, indite same this – username @ domainname. com (Please note the space in between). Then during the harvesting process it won’t work easily.

2. Write your telecommunicate same this – username (at the) domainname.com or net, or edu, some it haw be.

3. Use a web form. Those who genuinely want to contact you will fill the modify with their details and intend in touch with you. So you undergo who is contacting you.

4. Never reply to a spam email. Many advise that replying to a spam telecommunicate confirms your telecommunicate come to the spammer.

5. While leaving your telecommunicate come for stuff up a modify to intend more information please check with their concealment policy, to ensure that they won’t expend your telecommunicate for any another purpose, another than the digit you’ve requested.

6. Make ingest of your telecommunicate provider’s filtering facility to reduce spam.

How to protect your business from Spam

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

Even accepting as accurate as accessible with my email address, I still acclimated to accept added than 100 email letters a day, which is no exaggeration. Alone about 10% of those emails were from humans that I knew and the blow of the letters were exceptionable email…”spam”. And I’m abiding you can chronicle to my frustration. It is estimated that over seventy-six billion exceptionable email letters were delivered in 2003, costing companies added than $10 billion anniversary year.

So How Do They Get Our Email Addresses?

In authoritative online purchases, you should consistently apprehend that your email abode could be accustomed or sold, behindhand of what the merchant’s aloofness action may state. Even bushing out an online analysis or registering your email abode to become a affiliate of a web website is accountable to accepting your email abode accustomed away. Also, there are spider programs that spammers use that seek the web and “harvest” email addresses, abundant like seek engine spiders do if they access web website information.

Tips To Avoid Accepting Spam

1. Don’t Click “Unsubscribe”: On the basal of some spam emails you will acquisition an “Unsubscribe” link. Some of these are accepted links, while others are accoutrement to announce that your email abode is valid. Unsubscribing could in fact aftereffect in accepting added exceptionable email.

2. Spam Filtering: Some ISPs or area casework backpack spam clarification options, and there are filters and rules you can use in some email programs (i.e. Microsoft Outlook, Eudora and Apple’s Mail OSX). While no spam clarification affairs can annihilate spam completely, it can abundantly abate the bulk of spam you receive. But you accept to be accurate in application any array of spam clarification mechanism, as you may ultimately clarify out some of your capital email.

3. Get Two Email Addresses: Use your primary email abode for business or claimed use, and the added for authoritative online purchases and for bushing out web website allotment information.

4. Update Your Web Site: The best all-embracing band-aid is to accept humans acquaintance you through a anatomy on your web site, as your email abode is not so calmly revealed. If you accept to accept absolute links to your email abode on your site, accede accepting a hotlink that artlessly reads “email” or “contact” instead of spelling it out on a web page.

There are abounding simple methods that you can use to advice abate the bulk of spam advancing through to your business. By application these tips, you will not alone save yourself time and money, but you will ultimately forward a able bulletin to the humans forward exceptionable email.

How to choose a Best Spam Filter

Monday, May 25th, 2009

With the number of spam filtering solutions increasing each week it’s getting tougher for consumers to make informed choices in their purchases.

There are 3 basic types of spam filters:

  1. Integrated
  2. Standalone
  3. Online

We’ll look at each type of spam filter and at the end you should be able to decide what spam filter is right for you.

Integrated spam filters

This type of spam filtering software is the most common. Once installed it sits “on top” of your existing email software and installs a new set of buttons into your email software. In future when you collect email you’ll see options for marking email as Spam, marking the email as Not Spam, Bounce the email back to sender, etc. The description and position of these buttons varies from one product to the next but their purpose remains the same.

Most integrated spam filters automatically place suspected junk email into a separate folder on your PC for you to review or delete later on.

The newer integrated spam filters are also “intelligent”. They can basically learn the difference between what is spam and what is not and delete the junk email you don’t want.

The most popular integrated spam filters are:

  • iHate Spam
  • Spambully
  • Spam Inspector

Integrated spam filters are most popular amongst people who want a one click solution to collecting their personal email and filtering junk email at the same time.

Advantages:

One click solution.

Disadvantages:

Software specific. Some work with Outlook and Outlook Express only.

Standalone spam filters

These are less common than their integarted counterparts but that doesn’t make them any less useful. A standalone spam filter is basically a separate piece of software installed on your PC that you use to check your email for spam.

Standalone filters have the big advantage of being able to preview your email on the mail server before it’s downloaded to your PC. This one single feature has the huge benefit of allowing you to just download the email that you want as opposed to downloading all of your email, including the spam, and then sorting through it.

Using a standalone spam filter is a little more work simply because it’s a separate piece of software that you have to run before you open up your email software. Most standalone filters do allow you to configure them so that your standard email application is opened once you’ve chosen what spam to filter. This suits some people and not others.

The most popular standalone spam filter is:

Mailwasher Pro

Advantages:

Doesn’t rely on specific email applications to work properly.

Disadvantages:

Two step process. Load standalone filter and then your email application.

Online spam filters

There are really two types of online spam filters. One is for business use and one is for home use. A typical example of a business type product is iHate Spam server edition where the software deletes junk email directly from the mail server before the end user even sees it. Large companies employ this type of technology.

Home users will be using Spam Arrest or similar. Spam Arrest offers an inventive solution to spam whereby any email sent to the users account has a challenge request sent back to it which the sender must authenticate. The automatic junk email software used by spammers can’t currently deal with this type of response. Any failure to authenticate the challenge email results in the junk email being left to die in cyberspace. A user is authenticated with Spam Arrest only once for security just to make sure the software doesn’t become a nuisance.

The most popular online spam filter is:

Spam Arrest

Advantages:

Users are guaranteed to only receive the email that they want or requested.

Disadvantages:

Any technical problems with the Spam Arrest server and you have no defense against spam.

source: ezine article

You should know this about Spam

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

As everyone who will ever read this, I get spam in my e-mail. Mine seems to fall into one of three categories. The first is a Nigeria scam about helping some poor, pathetic soul collect mega bucks, supposedly from someone who has died and left a fortune. I’m not sure what is worse: that there are people desperate enough to believe that message, or that there are people despicable enough to prey on despair. The result is despicable Con is desperate to send money to the desperate will never see again.

The third type is not so innocent. These people, like other types of people when you talk, surf the web, find sites and harvest email addresses from the “contact us” link. Rather than start out by sending you what they have to offer, they get Devious, Sneaky, and just plain under-handed. They send you a message requesting more information about what you offer on your site. When you answered graciously, it turns out that they could not care less about what you have to offer. All they want is to verify your email address so they can start to copy offers you, hope you will buy something from them. Nasty taste.

The second type comes from people who sound innocent enough. They have a product or a company or service or anything else that is totally legitimate. They surf the web, find one of my sites, find the “contact us”, and send me information on what they have to offer. I guess, in their minds, it is no different than walking on the street or go through the phone book to write down the addresses and then send out bulk business mail with the same offering. They could get the same information on more money and less time by buying a mailing list. This is perfectly legitimate. Harvesting email addresses off of Web sites, it is not. Spam is officially defined as “unwanted junk mail.” The key word is “undesirable.” If I did not ask for it and send it anyway, it is unsolicited. When people harvest e-mail addresses off of websites and then send commercial messages, which by definition is spam. I report them to my ISP and you should too.

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