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What is Spam?
Most spam comes in the form of unsolicited email. Internet users are
being held hostage by a small number of people who are forcing them to
receive messages they otherwise would prefer not to see. Most spam is
commercial advertising. Items being advertised can range from products
of dubious quality, get-rich-quick schemes that are legal or otherwise,
to pornography sites.
One of the most irritating things about spam is that it costs the sender
very little to send. Most of the costs associated with spam are paid for
by the receiver or the carrier. People that use dial-up services are
particularly hard hit especially if they are paying by the minute to
have to read and delete the spam. It also costs Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) to transmit spam. These costs are usually passed on to
the people subscribing to the ISP.
How to Deal with Spam
It's almost impossible to block spam from getting into your email, these
days. The longer you keep an email address, the greater the probability
that it will get spammed. Here's a few things you can do about the spam,
however:
- Use a filter. Most email programs,
and a lot of web-based email providers offer different types of
filtering options to seperate your junk mail from the email you want
to receive. You can also purchase filtering programs to add to your
email.
- Don't buy spam-advertised products.
This not only confirms your email address to the spammers, but it
also gives them more information about you. You probably don't want
your real name, address, phone number, and credit card numbers,
etc., going out to people who value your privacy so little that they
would send you unsolicited email.
- Don't click on the 'Remove' link on
the spam. This will just confirm to the spammers that they've got a
real live, monitored email address. You'll probably just end up
getting more spam from them. Even worse, they can sell your email
addy to other spammers.
- Have public and private email
addresses. Use a free web-based email address for when you join
chats, post to newsgroups, enter contests, or whenever an email
address is required by a third party online. That way most of the
spam will go to those addresses. Don't give out your private email
address to anyone other than trusted friends, family, and business
associates.
- Don't post your email address online
to chatrooms, guest books, newsgroups, etc. Spammers love that. They
send out programs called spiders to search and record posted email
addresses. Once a list of known email addresses is compiled, it can
be sold to other spammers.
- Complain to your Internet Service
Provider. If enough people complain about a spammer, then they will
be denied access to the system.
- Do not reply or forward
'chain-letter' email. I'm sure you've gotten email with lists of
everyone who's been sent that email before you. Many spammers obtain
addresses from forwarded email that has the addresses of everyone
the on that email list.
- Be wary about giving your email
address to a website or company that you don't know.
- Before you give your address to a
website, check their privacy policies. Make sure they won't sell or
share your address.
- Read all web forms carefully before
you give personal information to a website. You may have the chance
to opt out of getting email from "partner" sites or advertisers.
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