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Does everyone get a lot of SPAM after they have sent a message to this
group? Mike |
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From: "Dian and Mike"
| Does everyone get a lot of SPAM after they have sent a message to this | group? | Mike You mean because YOU posted with an open, non-obfuscated, email address as shown above ? -- Dave http://www.claymania.com/removal-trojan-adware.html Multi-AV - http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp |
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"Dian and Mike" wrote in message
... Does everyone get a lot of SPAM after they have sent a message to this group? Mike Munge your e-mail address. See http://members.aol.com/emailfaq/mungfaq.html; however, FIRST munge the domain so that it does not match on any registered domain. Be polite to others in that you don't energize spam to their domain where they have to expend their resources to handle it. That way, the spammer's mail server can't even begin to send their crap because there will be no receiving mail host by that name to which they can connect (i.e., the mail session is rejected immediately and no one except the sender has to waste resources handling the spam). You could then secondly munge your username but it is superfluous since munging the domain is sufficient to thwart spam. Rather than munge your e-mail address (assuming you even need to provide one), use the special TLD (top-level domain) of .invalid which no one can use. The sender can never find a receiving mail host to which it can connect by that name to even begin trying to send spam. You would use as your e-mail address and explain in your signature with what .invalid gets replaced. This presumes that you even need to supply an e-mail address. Some NSPs don't check the From header so they don't require you to provide an e-mail address in your posts. It could be blank or it could be some string that is not an e-mail address. Some NSPs require a syntactically correct e-mail address in the From header of your posts but you can use a bogus or munged e-mail address. There are some NSPs that require you use the same e-mail address as is recorded in your registration to use their service, so you're screwed with those NSPs that are forcing you to deliberately divulge a valid e-mail address (and why you might try using an alias or disposable account to register with that NSP). If you are willing to devote an e-mail account for a specific purpose, like for taking newsgroup discussions offline via e-mail (which is rude to other newsgroup visitors but might be necessary for sensitive topics) or for forums, you could use a special filter that blocks all spam from getting into the Inbox for that special account. You would define a filter that looks for a special string (or passcode) in the Subject of any e-mail delivered to that account: if that string is *not* in the Subject header then the e-mail gets [permanently] deleted. It could be any nonsensical string of characters, like !BR:12A# or whatever you like, that is not likely to ever appear in the Subject header. Keep it short, like 4 to 6 characters, so good senders don't have to type many characters. Then in your signature of your posts you explain that this passcode MUST be added to the Subject or their e-mail will be automatically deleted upon delivery. You do not munge your e-mail address in your posts. Respondents sending you e-mail don't have to figure out how to unmunge your e-mail address (and many e-mail clients will erase the entire To field when the user tries to edit it which means the sender has to manually spell out your correct entire e-mail address). Spambots that roam newsgroups to harvest e-mail address WILL get your e-mail address but spambots do not know how to follow instructions. Spambots also do not harvest your instructions, and even if they did the spammer is not going to read through the harvested list to go read those instructions. Because the spam won't have the passcode in the Subject, it gets immediately deleted. Munging helps eliminate anyone (except the sender) expend their resources on handling spam in the first place but requires respondents to unmunge. A passcode means spam may target your special-use account but won't ever make it into your Inbox. And if anyone does figure out to add your passcode to get their spam through, you can easily edit the filter to change the passcode and then update the instructions in your signature. If you have known good senders for whom you don't want to have them bother or remember to enter your passcode, add them to a good sender list or whitelist rule (with their e-mail addresses or accepts anyone in your address book). Non-whitelisted senders must use the passcode to prevent having their e-mails automatically and immediately deleted upon delivery, and spam won't have the passcode. Use aliases to protect your true e-mail address if you have to provide a legitimate e-mail address to an unknown or untrusted recipient. Some e-mail providers include aliases as a feature of their service; however, an alias like yourname+alias@domain is pretty easy for anyone to figure out what is your true e-mail address, and even spambots than can parse on those worthless aliasing schemes. At www.sneakemail.com, you can define aliases which can be disposable, disabled if you want to reuse them, changed as to which e-mail account they redirect, and their free version of their service has decent quotas for *personal* use. They are very anti-spam and will kill any aliases and their accounts if you report the abuse to them. An advantage of defining any number of aliases is that you can create a unique one that is divulged to only a single untrusted recipient. Then if you ever receive spam through that alias, you will know exactly who betrayed you. I always use an alias when registering at any site, even for well-known companies, and after a few months of not receiving spam through that alias will I then update my account with them to show my true e-mail address (since I really don't want to manage a huge list of aliases). With sneakemail, and unlike forwarding services, if you reply to an e-mail sent through your alias, it goes back through sneakemail to strip out your headers and use their's plus it checks that you haven't divulged your e-mail address in the body of your reply. With simple forwarding services, you will probably reveal your true e-mail address if you reply to forwarded e-mail since you are sending straight from your true account. If you only want to have a temporary alias that expires after so many times that it gets used or after some period of time, look at at service like www.trashmail.net. Use disposable or temporary e-mail accounts if you want them available for awhile. Yahoo Mail, Hotmail, and Gmail are a few freebie e-mail providers that you could use. However, I find having to wade through the registration process for these advertisement-laden free accounts more time consuming than just defining an alias at sneakemail or trashmail. With an alias you can have it redirect to your real e-mail account to which you can connect a local e-mail client rather than get stuck with having to use a webmail interface (Gmail has POP3/IMAP4 but their emulations suck and that service still has problems, anyway). Protect your true e-mail address. Don't expect anyone else to do it for you. |
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![]() Duncan, Where do I go to "Munge" my address. Mail Settings?? or options?? or?? Thanks, Mike "Duncan McC" wrote in message ... In article , Does everyone get a lot of SPAM after they have sent a message to this group? Mike I would say everyone that posts to any newsgroup will get spam if they use their real email addy. Replies should be to the NG. However, for whatever other special reason, if you want to put your real addy in, munge it, and say how it's munged. That way, the spammers that harvest addys from usenet newsgroups won't be able to work it out (it's just a computer program) - but we will. -- Duncan |
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Dian and Mike wrote:
Where do I go to "Munge" my address. Mail Settings?? or options?? or?? Change the "E-mail Address" field in your account properties. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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