How To Stop or Avoid Spam Email
If you’re a member of the current millennia, you’ve probably heard the word. For those of us that use email (which is most of us these days), the experience is all too familiar and annoying.
Let’s talk about what SPAM is, where it comes from, and hopefully the reader can gain some insight into how to avoid spam and spammers.
If you’ve ever gotten emails pushing the sale of prescription drugs or pornography, prompting you to refinance your mortgage, or expounding the wonders of the latest get rich quick work from home business, you’ve most likely been spammed.
Sparing the tedium of a formal definition, SPAM emails often have no “opt out” links (any newsletter you get is supposed to have these in case you decide you no longer want the emails). The ones that do are phony, and you will most likely continue to receive emails or receive even more as clicking the link verifies that the email address in question (yours) is real and is being used. These types of emails are not permission based and usually appear out of nowhere. Legitimate emails from businesses usually have useful information and/or coupons/specials, and are sent out on a regular basis, but not so often as to become annoying. One can easily opt out without worry of repeated offense.
Now for the good stuff: how the heck do spammers get your email address?
There are actually a few ways this is done. One popular method is by way of the spider (search engines use these for legitimate purposes also), also called spam bots or robots. These are just programs that “crawl” the Web or the Internet looking for email addresses posted on websites, such as emailatmyaddressdotwhatever (had to write it this way or I could not submit the article; any way to request an exception for cases like this???). Think twice before you post your email address on blogs, personal sites, online directories, and other websites where it can be easily picked up.
Ever sign up for an online subscription or buy something online? How about those enticing freebies such as eBooks and webinars (note: if we offer something free in exchange for your email, etc don’t worry; we are not spammers)? Most web companies use this information to build a legitimate opt in list so they can send out newsletters, specials, and market to you. A few may sell the info to other online companies (read their privacy policy-if they have one, but the ethical ones usually won’t; they just want to grow their business).
When you buy something online most of the time you will have to enter an email address to check out. Some sites allow you to check out without registering, while others that make you register keep your email address to themselves and do not share it.
Other guys aren’t so nice. Some will sell lists of email addresses to spammers to make extra money. Create a “throw away” email account on Hotmail, Yahoo, of Gmail and use that for online purchases and subscriptions. And as boring as it may be, consider checking their privacy policy (see above).







