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 Spam
Prevention Tips for Business Email Users |
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| One
of the many problems facing business email users
today is that they are allowing spammers to easily
identify their email address and are then scrambling
to prevent the spam from reaching their inbox.
To prevent spammers from harvesting email addresses,
we recommend that businesses be very careful about
where they publish their email addresses—this
will help to prevent their addresses from getting
on bulk mailing lists in the first place. We specifically
recommend the following: |
Create alias email addresses that can be replaced.
We advise that all email users create at least
one separate, dedicated email alias address
to be used for all e-commerce purchases and
when registering for third-party services. Also,
use this email address when posting to discussion
lists, newsgroups, message boards, and when
displaying email addresses to the public, such
as on a website. In other words, only list generic
email addresses on websites, such as sales1@domain.com,
support1@domain.com, etc.
One of the most prominent ways that spammers
collect email addresses is by writing automatic
scripts that crawl the Internet and pick email
addresses off of websites. For this reason,
email users and webmasters should only publish
generic email aliases on the web. These aliases
should, preferably, be replaceable so that once
spammers pick up on the aliases, the aliases
can be discarded and replaced with another alias
address.
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Do not give your email address away unless you
are confident that the recipient is a trusted
party. If it is an optional request from a third
party, leave it blank. If it is required, it
is best to use your temporary email alias address
or an email account that you have with a free
provider such as Yahoo! or Hotmail.
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Do not unsubscribe from spam that you receive
unless you know it is from a trusted source.
Many spammers use unsubscribe requests to verify
that email addresses are in fact legitimate.
Once you unsubscribe, they know the email was
received. This actually makes your email address
more valuable to spammers. If you believe that
you are receiving an unwanted bulk email from
a reputable company, un-subscribing will most
likely be safe and should be done. However,
if you don't know the sender, don't unsubscribe
or reply.
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Do not rely on AOL, Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail, or
other generic email addresses for business purposes.
Many companies that provide free email services
make money by selling email addresses and subscriber
information to spammers, advertisers, and other
third party marketing organizations. Additionally,
because these free email services have millions
of users, spammers attack those systems with
great frequency.
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Do not reply to or forward long chain letters
that you receive via email. Many spammers collect
email addresses from these chain letters that
are passed through hundreds and sometimes thousands
of groups of email users. While this is labor
intensive for some spammers, most of the email
addresses found within these chain letters are
legitimate and may become spam targets.
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Do not sign up for any service that claims to
be a "Do Not Spam List," similar to
the FCC's "Do Not Call List." Many
of these services are fraudulent and actually
may lead to your email address being added to
more spam lists.
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Use obfuscation techniques when publishing your
email address on web pages. Spammers use automated
programs to crawl the web in search of email
addresses. Therefore, it is a good idea to use
HTML tricks to make your email address unreadable
by these programs. For example, you can embed
HTML comment tags inside of your email address,
use character encoding techniques such as HTML
escaping and URI encoding, or use JavaScript
to write out the address. These techniques would
be transparent to your website visitors, but
may fool the automated programs.
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