Preventing Spam
Guide to help lower your risk of getting junk e-mail and a couple of ways to help stop Spam.
Part Four of Five
Some ISPs or webmail services may be hacked by spammers or the addresses may be sold to spammers. Read the small print when signing up for an email account. Look hard for that box that says 'we might give your address to a 3rd party, tick here if you do not want to recieve marketing info from other companies...'.
If you can't change your email address here is an excellent and free spam filter: Spam Bayes.
Hoax Spam
These are messages that innocent people may forward to you with some kind of hoax warning or way to make a fortune. Never respond to or forward this kind of message. They are hoaxes, see real example below. If you 'CC' (copy in) your friends and contacts you may be providing a way for spammers to harvest the email addresses of your friends/contacts. These rubbish emails sometimes end with something like: "Try it; What have you got to lose?"
What you have to lose is your privacy and credibility!
Typical example:
PLEEEEEASEREAD!!!! IT WAS ON THE NEWS!!
Dear Friends, Please do not take this for a junk letter.
Bill Gates is sharing his fortune. If you ignore this you will repent later. Microsoft and AOL are now the largest Internet companies and in an effort to make sure that Internet Explorer remains the most widely used program, Microsoft and AOL are running an e-mail beta test. When you forward this e-mail to friends, Microsoft can and will track it (if you are a Microsoft Windows user) for a two week time period. For every person that you forward this e-mail to, Microsoft will pay you $245.00, for every person that you sent it to that forwards it on, Microsoft will pay you $243.00 and for every third person that receives it, you will be paid $241.00. Within two weeks, Microsoft will contact you for your address and then send you a cheque. I thought this was a scam myself, but two weeks after receiving this e-mail and forwarding it on, Microsoft contacted me for my address and within days, I received a cheque for US$24,800.00. You need to respond before the beta testing is over. If anyone can afford this Bill Gates is the man. It's all marketing expense to him. Please forward this to as many people as possible. Try it; What have you got to lose????
More tools and tips to prevent spam
Anti spam software: There are many tools you can use that check incomming mail and try to detect which is spam and which is not. The spam emails are sent to a 'trash' folder on your pc. This is the spam filter I recommend and its free: Spam Bayes.
MailWasher.net is a free tool to check and manage your e-mails before you download them. I used to use this tool when I received a lot of spam. Its easy to use and free. The main benefit is that you can reveiew your email before downloading it, and delete the spam remotely.
Avoid CC (carbon copy) for group emails that you send out.
If you send an email (to a group of people) that might be forwarded on and on, it could get into the hands of a Spammer, who you can be sure will add the nice collection addresses to their spam address database. Instead use BCC (blind carbon copy), this means the recipients do not see the list of email addresses that your message has gone to. Also encourage others to use BCC for groups instead of CC.
Never add your friends email address to a mailing list.
You will not get a free prize and your friend will not thank you for the extra spam they receive.
Why doesn't my anti-spam software prevent all of the spam?
Much anti-spam software identifies spam by the following methods:
Blocking email from known spammer addresses.
Get a website designer to use javascript to protect your email address from being collected automatically can prevent spammers from ever getting your address.
Identifying obscene words in the email.
Identifying a form e.g. 'click here to buy this rubbish'.
Identifying certain sales/marketing words.
Many spammers use systems to do things like the following
Each individual spam email of the millions they send appears to come from a different address.
The invite to buy something is actually an image of text not real text so it can't be read by your computer. The text behind the image is random words that you don't see but look innocent to your computer.
The invite is to click a link for a website, so there is not a form on the email. The form to buy something is on the website.
catch up with me next week for part Five..


