Is This The Solution To Stop Spam?
Posted on December 21, 2007 - Filed Under Internet |
Or, what can you REALLY do to stop spam?
I’ve been using email since about 1994. In those days getting spam in your inbox was a novelty; almost a “someone’s thinking about me” type moment. These days not much spam gives you that warm fuzzy feeling. Not long ago I was up to 300 spam emails a day.
Currently email users, ISPs, hosting companies and SysAdmins are losing a war to stop spam slowing down the internet, clogging up our inboxes and taking all the damn fun out of emailing.
There are many ways to minimise spam and here are a few:
- Never use your true email address in a blog/newsgroup.
- Never put your email address on a website.
- Never give your email address out to anyone unless you are 100% sure of their good intentions towards you.
- Never send an email to a group of people using CC (use BCC) and NEVER let one of your skanky mates CC you either. (and if you work out how to do that, let me know.)
- Get a disposable email address from hotmail, yahoo, etc. for those moments when you HAVE to give it out, and change it whenever you start getting spam.
Once your true email address has been harvested by spammers, it is nearly impossible to take control of it again. You’ll have noticed that some spam arrives with an innocent looking “If you don’t wish to receive these messages anymore, please unsubscribe here” message. What to do?
If it’s from a reputable retailer/business where you have in the past give your email address, it’s pretty safe to hit unsubscribe/remove and they will honour your request (it usually takes a week or so for them to clean you out of their marketing database). I’d include Amazon, eBay, Microsoft, and the like in this list.
If it’s from Bob’s Online Drugs, don’t go near it. The spammers will know from your remove request that your email addy is valid, and guess what? You’ll get more!
There are several decent tools around for filtering spam:
- Gmail has a spam filter that has good reputation.
- Thunderbird, sort of an open source version of Outloook Express, has a good spam filter.
- Cactus has a great filter, and it’s free. It takes a little training, but nothing an average PC-user can’t handle.
The ISPs and hosting companies join the battle!
These days many ISPs and hosting companies are offering spam filters to their subscribers. These vary in quality from excellent (congrats to the boys at United Hosting U.K. for their hard work) to useless (but no names here).
Additionally, many ISPs are using blacklists (databases of suspected spammers) to filter out spam. These are well-intentioned but all that effective. It’s easy to innocently get onto one of these lists, it isn’t always obvious you are blacklisted, and it can be very difficult to get off, especially if the ISP is slow honouring requests from genuine hosing companies (Hotmail can take several weeks), and in the meantime you can find that a bunch of genuine mail goes missing.
Even the legislators take notice
Legislation is a nice idea but it ain’t helping; how can we possibly get all countries to make sending spam illegal? Some countries have better things to do (like feed their people), than concern themselves about spam. Other countries don’t care. (Russia was an example, although lately they seem to have improved.)
You’ve done your best to keep your true addy a secret (of course it defeats the purpose if no-one at all has it!), you’ve got some proactive strategies, some filters, and an unseen army fighting the spam war
for you, but you know that what’ll be waiting for you next time we open your inbox, so let’s try to
think imaginatively about this.
Why do spammers send spam?
It’s cheap! Ridiculously cheap to send 5, 10 or even 50 millions emails. The cost is creating the
email/message, some nasty software to send out mass emails, a PC and an internet connection. Even so,
cheap is expensive if it doesn’t bring in a dollar, so why do they do it?
Here’s why…
Because for every ten zillion spam emails they send out, some twit buys their crap! That’s right,
somewhere in internetland, some dopey dumdum is saying yes to a job at home that’ll make them richer
than Bill Gates, getting hot and sweaty about an offer for a 20 cent discount at the “Bring ‘em on in
Casino”, or assisting some dodgey African squirrel away a large fortune from their ex-countrymen.
The solution?
Now what would happen if we all stopped answering those emails? Well… eventually, the spammers would realise they were wasting their money. And then they’d STOP!
And then they’d go get proper jobs and leave us alone.
Maybe this is wishful thinking, but I feel this is a valid solution to fight spam that is rarely given
coverage.
This article was written by Craig McLaughlan on March 8, 2007. I’ve been a professional internet user
since 1999 and am a specialist in SEO in Barcelona Spain And I hate spam.
Tags: spam, spam filters, website marketing
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