![]() |
SPAM
Although I am blocking spam into the blocked senders list, it would be useful
to have a receipients list to do the same thing. This would also assist if any users were having difficulties with unwanted 'fan' mail. ---------------- This post is a suggestion for Microsoft, and Microsoft responds to the suggestions with the most votes. To vote for this suggestion, click the "I Agree" button in the message pane. If you do not see the button, follow this link to open the suggestion in the Microsoft Web-based Newsreader and then click "I Agree" in the message pane. http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...tlook.contacts |
SPAM
june wrote:
Although I am blocking spam into the blocked senders list, it would be useful to have a receipients list to do the same thing. Describe what you mean by this. -- Brian Tillman |
SPAM
Brian
I am having trouble with unwanted emails. I keep all virus protection and firewalls up to date but still lots come through. I am down to about 20 a day!!! I have followed all of the recommendations to block SPAM. But this appears only to be possible by placing the junk mail in the blocked senders list. As I interpert the block senders list it is to place addresses in there that you do not wish to send email to. I have been using this; and it has reduced some traffic. The emails causing the problems are the ones I am receiving. Unwanted emails, I just wish that I could block these. The email address in the 'to' section is not mine its a scramble of alpha's and then the rest of my email address, or not my email address at all. Or it states that the receipient cannot accept my email because of XZY. I do not have any contacts in my address book for the simple fact of viruses. I do not wish to change my email address as it has been in use for many years and only since going onto broadband recently has the issue with the quantity of SPAM occurred. Thanks June "june" wrote: Although I am blocking spam into the blocked senders list, it would be useful to have a receipients list to do the same thing. This would also assist if any users were having difficulties with unwanted 'fan' mail. ---------------- This post is a suggestion for Microsoft, and Microsoft responds to the suggestions with the most votes. To vote for this suggestion, click the "I Agree" button in the message pane. If you do not see the button, follow this link to open the suggestion in the Microsoft Web-based Newsreader and then click "I Agree" in the message pane. http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...tlook.contacts |
SPAM
june wrote:
I am having trouble with unwanted emails. I keep all virus protection and firewalls up to date but still lots come through. I am down to about 20 a day!!! I have followed all of the recommendations to block SPAM. But this appears only to be possible by placing the junk mail in the blocked senders list. As I interpert the block senders list it is to place addresses in there that you do not wish to send email to. I have been using this; and it has reduced some traffic. Actually, it's to contain addresses or domains from which you do not wish to receive mail, but it's fairly ineffective because the sender address of spam changes so frequently. Why would you want to prevent yourself from sending mail TO someone. That's fairly weasy to do. Just don't include the address in a recipient field when you compose it. The emails causing the problems are the ones I am receiving. Unwanted emails, I just wish that I could block these. The email address in the 'to' section is not mine its a scramble of alpha's and then the rest of my email address, or not my email address at all. Or it states that the receipient cannot accept my email because of XZY. I do not have any contacts in my address book for the simple fact of viruses. This sounds like you're receiving non-delivery reports. Current practice for spammers is to hijack the addresses of people like yourself (and myself, for that matter) and then use the addresses as the sender addresses when they send their crap. Often the recipient lists they use contain a lot of bogus addresses and since those addresses don't exist, the servers that receive them generate non-delivery reports back to the address they perceive as the sender address - yours. You didn't send the message, the spammer did, but it appears to have come from you, so you get the bounce-back. There's little that can be done about it. Sometimes you can filter some of the bounces out using rules, but NDR messages are special and often don't contain enough information the rules engine can see to take that approach. It's possible an add-on antispam program like Norton Antispam or SpamBayes (free from http://spambayes.sourceforge.net/) would do a better job of filtering such messages. I do not wish to change my email address as it has been in use for many years and only since going onto broadband recently has the issue with the quantity of SPAM occurred. One way to avoid getting SPAM is to never, EVER put your address in a public location on the Internet, like these newsgroups, Yahoo! Groups, MySpace, or web pages. However, that doesn't protect you from having your address harvested from a friend's computer because your friend is too naive to properly protect his PC, and once one spammer gets your address, other will get it too, because a LOT of spammers actually make their money not from the junk mail they send, but by the sale of the mail address lists they harvest. I once saw a picture of the relationships between the various spammer and they are all fairly connected to each other. -- Brian Tillman |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:05 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 2.4.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 OutlookBanter.com