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Spam Do's
and Don'ts |
- Never respond to spam e-mail. For a spammer, one "hit" among
thousands of mailings is enough to justify the practice. Instead, if you want a
product that is advertised in spam e-mail, go to a Web site that also carries
the product, inquire there, and tell them you do not approve of spam methods and
will not patronize a company that uses spammers.
- Never respond to the spam e-mail's instructions to reply with the word
"remove." This is just a trick to get you to react to the e-mail -- it
alerts the sender that a human is at your address, which greatly increases its
value. If you reply, your address is placed on more lists and you receive more
spam.
- Never sign up with sites that promise to remove your name from spam lists.
These sites are of two kinds: (1) sincere, and (2) spam address collectors. The
first kind of site is ignored (or exploited) by the spammers and the second is
owned by them. In both cases your address is recorded and valued more highly
because you have just identified it as read by a human.
- Never mail-bomb spam sites or engage in hacking to stop spammers. This only
increase the amount of wasted Internet traffic, creates sympathy for spammers,
and makes the Internet even less reliable.
- Take meaningful action to stop spammers. Filter their messages or their sites
using your mail client such as Outlook. Use the organize option in Outlook to
organize junk email and/or delete. This may not eradicate the problem but should
partially help guarding against unwanted email.
- Be cautious when you join a newsgroup with your email address. Your address
may end up in the hands of spammers.
Copyright ©2002 Odyssey Networks