Fighting Spam
Studies show
unsolicited or “junk” e-mail, known as spam, accounts for roughly half of all e-mail messages received. Although once regarded as little
more than a nuisance, the prevalence of spam has increased to the point where many users have begun to express a general lack of confidence in
the effectiveness of e-mail transmissions, and increased concern over the spread of computer viruses via unsolicited messages.
In 2003, President Bush signed the “Can Spam” bill, in December
of 2003 which is the first national standards around bulk unsolicited commercial e-mail. The bill, approved by the Senate by a
vote of 97 to 0, prohibits senders of unsolicited commercial e-mail from using false return addresses to disguise their identity (spoofing) and
the use of dictionaries to generate such mailers. In addition, it prohibits the use of misleading subject lines and requires that emails include
and opt-out mechanism. The legislation also prohibits senders from harvesting addresses off Web sites. Violations constitute a
misdemeanor crime subject to up to one year in jail.
One major point that needs to be discussed about this:
spam is now coming from other countries in ever-greater numbers. These emails are harder to fight, because they come from outside our country’s
laws and regulations. Because the Internet opens borders and thinks globally, these laws are fine and good, but do not stop
the problem.
So what do you do about this? Her are the top 5 Rules to do to protect from spam.
Number 1: Do what you can
to avoid having your email address out on the net.
There are products called “spam spiders” that search the Internet for email
addresses to send email to. If you are interested, do a search on “spam spider” and you will be amazed at what you get
back. Interestingly, there is a site, WebPoison.org, which is an open source project geared to fight
Internet "spambots" and "spam spiders", by giving them bogus HTML web pages, which contain bogus email addresses
A couple suggestions for you: a) use form emails, which
can hide addresses or also b) use addresses like sales@company.com instead of your full address to help battle the problem.
c) There are also programs that encode your email, like jsGuard, which encodes your email address on web pages so that while spam spiders find it
difficult or impossible to read your email address.
Number 2: Get spam blocking software.
There are many programs out there for this. (go to www.spambully.comor
www.spamweed.comfor example).
You may also buy a professional version. Whatever you do, get the software. It will save you time. The
software is not foolproof, but they really do help. You usually have to do some manual set up to block certain types of
email.
Number 3: Use the multiple email address approach.
There are a lot of free email addresses to be had. If you
must subscribe to newsletters, then have a “back-up” email address. It would be like giving your sell phone number to your best friends and the
business number to everyone else.
Number 4: Attachments from people you don’t know are
BAD, BAD, BAD.
A common problem with spam is that they have attachments and attachments can
have viruses. Corporations often have filters that don’t let such things pass to you. Personal email is far
more “open country” for spamers. General rule of thumb: if you do not know who is sending you something,
DO NOT OPEN THE ATTACHMENT. Secondly, look for services that offer filtering. Firewall vendors offer
this type of service as well.
Number 5: Email services now have “bulk-mail”
baskets. If what you use currently does not support this, think about moving to a new vender. The concept
is simple. If you know someone, they can send you emails. If you don’t know them, put them in the bulk
email pile and then “choose” to allow them into your circle. Spam Blocking software has this concept as well, but having extra
layers seems critical these days, so it is worth looking into.
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