How To Stop Spam (Especially If You’re
Already a Victim)
by Karyn Greenstreet
Spam. Those annoying, time-consuming emails that clog your Inbox and ruin
your day. You wonder: How did it ever get so bad? While it's not
possible to completely eliminate spam, there are quite a few things
you CAN do about the problem to reduce your burden.
Spam is defined as an unsolicited email trying to get you to buy
something. In addition, it's email that tries to get you to give
up something: your credit card number, social security number, login
ID, etc., by pretending to be a legitimate email. Here are some
tips for stopping the current spam you're getting, and avoiding
getting on new spam lists.
1. Maintain two email addresses: a Personal Email Address (that
you give to family, friends and business associates), and a Safe
Email Address (one you use whenever you're ordering something online,
signing up for an email newsletter, or creating a profile on a website).
For instance, I use a Hotmail account for my Safe Email Address.
If a spammer were to get a hold of that address, fine. All the spam
will go into my Hotmail account, which I only look at once a week.
Hotmail has a great anti-spam filter built in, so it's easy to see
what's spam and what's not. This practice leaves my personal email
account relatively spam-free (maybe I get two spam emails a day
to my personal account). Some free email services include Hotmail,
Yahoo and GMail (Google's new email service).
2. Use your Safe Email Address to send emails to companies who
might be harvesting email addresses from incoming emails. For example,
say you want to write to a company to ask them about their products.
Some companies will harvest your email address from the email you
send to them, and put you on their mailing list. By using your Safe
Email Address, you can avoid seeing messages from these companies
come to your personal email address.
3. Stop giving your email address to everyone who wants it. Does
your local bank really need your email address? Does your grocery
store need it? Just because someone asks for it doesn't mean you
have to give it to them. If it's a non-local company, or you are
signing up for a mailing list, then they probably do need it. But
it's okay to leave the email address blank when filling out forms.
Always ask yourself, Do I want to be contacted by this company via
email? (Speaking of mailing lists, make sure the companies you subscribe
to have a public, posted Privacy Statement on their website.)
4. Do not put your Personal Email Address on your website. Instead,
use a form so that your email address is hidden. However, some spammers
use special software that looks at the HTML code hidden in the form
to steal your email address, so using a form by itself isn't always
the safest route. Better yet, use a free Form Processor so that
your email address is never even in the HTML coding on your pages.
The service I use is Bravenet's Form processor (www.bravenet.com).
You can see ours in action here: http://www.passionforbusiness.com/send-email.htm
5. Never buy anything that's sent through a spam email. First,
it just encourages them to continue to spam. Second, it tells them
that your email address is accurate, and they can then sell that
address to someone else.
6. Never reply to spam and ask to be unsubscribed. They'll just
ignore it anyway, and it tells them that your email address is accurate,
which just keeps you on the list. Note: many legitimate emails newsletters
and mailing lists use automated unsubscribe links at the bottom
of their emails, and you CAN use these to get off of mailing lists.
7. Use anti-spam software, like Norton Internet Security, on your
own PC to filter spam as it comes into your email system. You still
receive the spam, but it gets filtered to a Junk Mail or Bulk Mail
folder, and segregates the spam from the legitimate email. Most
anti-spam filters need to be trained, however, so you'll have to
occasionally tell the filter that something is NOT spam that it
inadvertently put into the Junk Mail folder. Many of these anti-spam
filters work on the principle of White Lists (legitimate email addresses
that you DO want to receive email from) and Black Lists (spammer
email addresses that you do NOT want to receive email from). Learn
how to train your anti-spam software and it will work wonders for
you.
8. Check to see if your ISP or hosting company has anti- spam technology
in place, to catch spam before it even hits your Inbox. Be careful,
though, because sometimes these filters are over-zealous and you
have to train it to accept emails from mailing lists that you have
subscribed to.
9. Do not use a catch-all email address. A catch-all email address
is set up if you have your own website, and it is intended to catch
all of the incoming emails sent to your domain even if there is
no legitimate mailbox by that name. For example, your email address
might be mary@mydomain.com. If that mailbox is set up as a catch
all, and someone sends an email to marie@mydomain.com (with a spelling
mistake in the email name), it will be forwarded to mary@mydomain.com.
However, spammers know about catch-all email addresses, and will
take your domain name mydomain.com and add common prefixes to it,
like info@ or admin@. If you have a catch- all, then those spamming
emails will come to you, even if you don't have a legitimate mailbox
of info@mydomain.com or admin@mydomain.com set up with your hosting
company. See how easy it is for spammers to get to you?
10. Finally, if spam is really bad, create a new personal email
address for yourself, tell everyone about the new address (give
them several reminders that you are changing email addresses), then
delete the old personal email address. This may seem a little drastic,
but if you receive 200 spam emails a day, it might be time to time
this final step to eradicate it.
You are not powerless against spam. But you do have to take action
to fight back. Don't let them bully you into accepting hundreds
of unwanted emails a day! Take action now to reclaim your Inbox!
About The Author
Karyn Greenstreet is a Self Employment expert and small business
coach. She shares tips, techniques and strategies with self-employed
people to boost clarity and focus, create sustainable motivation,
and increase sales and profits. Visit her website at www.PassionForBusiness.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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