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Stay anonymous.
Spammers use email robots called mailbots to collect addresses from newsgroups and the Web.
You can outwit them. Never add your address to Internet email directories. When you're on the Web, leave the email address field in generic Web forms blank, or supply a decoy address.
For especially delicious spam redirection, give the email address of your least favorite online company -- e.g. webmaster@[insert company name here].com.
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Confuse spammers by using two email accounts.
Make one your primary account that you give out to friends, family, and colleagues. Use the other account for mailing lists, newsgroups, or Web forms. If your ISP doesn't provide a second address at no charge, get a free Web-based email account.
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Scramble your address.
If you post public messages to newsgroups or Web discussion boards, you can limit the amount of junk sent to you by practicing address munging (also called spoofing). Adding extra characters or words to your outgoing address confuses mailbots. You can make the change in your email application's preferences. If your real address is joe@isp.com, a scrambled version would be joe_spambait@removethis.isp.com. Be sure to add instructions in your signature file that explain how to decode your address so you can receive legitimate replies, but don't include your actual email address because mailbots scan the contents of all posts.
If you're a webmaster who would like to get in touch with real customers and avoid the bots, you can use JavaScript. Find out more here.
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Screen the spam.
Your email software's filtering tools can block unwanted messages automatically. (Read about Outlook's email filters here.) Here are some things you can set your email filters to look for:
If a message doesn't include your correct email address in the To: or Cc: field, trash it.
Take note of the domains that frequently send you junk mail, and block messages coming from them.
Delete messages with subject lines in all caps (Tell your friends to avoid leaving Caps Lock on.) and messages with a lot of dollar signs or exclamation points. You should also filter out messages that contain a subject line with typical spammer lingo like "make money fast."
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Never respond directly to junk mail.
A reply verifies to the spammer that your email address is active. If you're riled up enough about it, complain to the ISP that hosts the
spammer. Figuring out where junk mail originated can be tricky, however.Open the message and look for IP addresses or domains within parentheses in the header's Received lines (information outside the parentheses could be faked), then verify them using
Acme Address
Digger. Once you've identified the most likely culprit, visit the
spam.abuse.net for the appropriate contacts, and send a message requesting that they help stop spam coming from the offending domains.
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