If you have other
suggestions please contact us at:
techtip @ organizenow.net.
Last Updated
11/2002.
Have your email accounts been rendered unusable by a constant
barrage of promotions about investment opportunities, weight
loss schemes, online gambling, phallic enlargement, etc?
While you probably already know a few good ways to avoid spam,
this tip sheet probably includes a few you might not be aware of.
Tip #1: Use an alternate email address for web registrations
and commercial email lists.
For example: josesmith@aol.com can set up an account josesmithsignup@yahoo.com
for free, just by going to yahoo.com.
Then, when Jose wants to set up a login at nytimes.com to
read the paper, he can give the alternate email instead of
his regular email to the Times.
Tip #2: Disguise any email addresses on your web page.
This is pretty easy to do: one method is to just say:
josesmith <at> aol.com
By doing this you allow most people to still access your email
address, but you effectively prevent automated software
programs that scan hundreds of thousands of web pages for
spammable emails from having access to it.
For an even more sophisticated way to do this, go to:
http://www.organizenow.net/home.shtml
and then "view the source" of this page in your web browser.
If you go down to the bottom you will note that the link that
is labeled "email us" is ENCODED with special characters that
show up in the source code of the web page but are hidden
on the web browser. The %20 is a space and the %40 is an @ sign.
The HTML looks something like this, and it seems to work for us!
mailto:%20oc%40organizenow.net
Tip #3: Use a form for feedback on your web page instead
of an email address.
This is highly recommended if your home page gets 100 or
more visits a day.
Tip #4: Spam-Protect your organization's email list archives,
and get all the email lists you post messages to to do this.
This is vitally important: many organizations are escaping from
dependence on ad-based systems like YahooGroups or
Topica and moving over to systems based on the free software
available at http://www.sympa.org or http://list.org. But these
systems are not always set up to provide spam protection the way that
Yahoo or Topica are. It can be additional work, but we strongly
recommend that you raise hell if your consultant provides you with
an email archive that is not spam protected. (If anyone had detailed
instructions on turning on spam protection using these systems or
linking them with third party archives like MHonarc, please email them
to us and we will post them.) It is important to allow people to
post to your email list without making their address available to
spammers. (The fee-based service at
www.npolists.org provides Sympa
with spam protection.)
Tip #5: Use Filters
Spam filtering is not always the best solution, as it is not 100%
accurate and you can miss an important email. Typically the spam
filtering is a piece of free software (on Linux based systems)
that is set up on the machine that gathers your email. If your
organization is large enough to have a dedicated mail server, there
is filtering software that your administrator could install on it.
If you use a small Internet Service Provider, spam filtering would
need to be set up at the ISP office, something that only some ISPs
are willing to do.
If you can't get the people responsible for your mail to filter
it, you can do it yourself using the shareware program
Mailwasher for Windows,
or the new "smart" spam filtering built in to Mac OS X. Mailwasher
is extremely interesting because after you mark an email as Spam,
Mailwasher will send back a message to the spammer that makes it
look as if your email address does not exist. This will actually
reduce incoming spam over time, if you are fortunate enough to be the target
of spammers who periodically clean up their spamming lists.
If you have
a http://mail.yahoo.com account,
spam filtering is built-in. If your non-Yahoo email is "POP-based"
but gets too much spam, you can "Check Other Email"
feature of your Yahoo account to enjoy the benefits of spam
filtering at no cost (giving you lots off time to change
your email address if necessary).
Tip #6: Set up Temporary Email Accounts and Mail Aliases
If your group has a webhosting account that lets you manage your web domain,
you usually can add and delete accounts very easily using the administrative interface
provided by the web hosting company. At www.organizenow.net
we do this for our annual conference: the conference@organizenow.net
email address exists only for the 8 weeks before this annual
event. We found out when we reactivated this email in May 2002 that
we were still getting spam from last year. So next year we plan
to name the email account conf2003 @organizenow.net, which should
take care of the problem once and for all!
Tip #7: Avoid using a common first name as an email address.
Have you ever received an email addressed to steve@x.com,
steve@y.com, steve@z.com, steve@abc.com, steve@def.com? As
you might have already deduced, spammers often buy the
list of all registered internet "domain names" and then try
tracy@<domain.com> for a million or more web domains. If only
2% get through, that's a lot of successful spam. So that
you will be less likely fall prey to this scam, consider
using an email like tracy-j@pta.org rather than tracy@pta.org.