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Knock
Out Spam With the One-Two Punch
by
Sharon Fling
Are
you sick of spam relentlessly spewing into your emailbox?
So was I, until I learned how to knock it out, or at least
slow it down, with my one-two punch. Do both of these things,
neither of which will cost you a penny, and enjoy a distinct
decrease in the amount of garbage in your inbox.
Here
we go:
#1-
Mail Washing
First,
hit the spam with Mailwasher, available free at www.mailwasher.net.
This easy to set up little program lets you preview email
before downloading it. You see all the usual details - sender,
subject, size - but with one big difference: you can decide
BEFORE downloading if you want it.
You
get, I'm sure, many emails that you wouldn't have downloaded
if only you'd known what was in them. That's just one thing
Mailwasher can do for you. Its real power is in its ability
to 'bounce' unwanted messages (spam) right back to the person
who sent it, marked 'message undeliverable.'
To
the spammer it looks as if your e-mail address is no longer
active, and hopefully, the next time they 'clean' their list,
your email address will fall off. But even if it doesn't,
Mailwasher adds the spammer's address to a blacklist. The
next time they spam you, it's already marked for deletion.
(You can always unmark it.)
When
you're finished 'washing' your mail of spam and unwanted downloads,
click 'process mail' and whatever messages are left will be
downloaded as usual when you log on through your e-mail program,
which you can do directly from MailWasher.
I
have over 20 email addresses, so you can imagine the flood
of spam that poured in my mailbox every day. Now I run them
all through Mailwasher first, and it has made a huge difference.
To
further reduce spam, Mailwasher has another trick that your
regular email program doesn't. It learns. There are all kinds
of settings, filters, sorts and alerts. The more you use it,
the more it learns what you do and don't want to see. It does
lots of stuff that I haven't even tried yet. But for what
I need - quick and dirty spam elimination - it does great.
Best
of all, it's free to try. If you like it, the author asks
that you pay him whatever you think is fair. How much you
pay him is up to you, but the funds go to future development
of the product. Considering how useful this program is, I
think that’s a very worthy cause. http://www.mailwasher.net
#2
- Email Encoding
Once
you've got Mailwasher going, you're on your way to getting
off the spam lists. To stay off, don't skip this second step!
One
of the ways that spammers get your email address is through
harvesting programs that crawl the net snatching email addresses
off of websites, message boards, newsgroups. Anywhere they
can find something that looks like an email address, they
grab it. And the way that they know it's an email address
is by looking for 'mailto' or the '@' symbol.
There
are programs available - also free - that will encode your
email address for you. This converts your ASCII email address
into its equivalent decimal entity. For example, the letter
“a” equates to: “a” (without the quotes), the letter “b”
equates to: “b”, and so forth.
Here’s
an example of an email address:
"johndoe@so
meserver.c
om"
which
appears as: johndoe@someserver.com
To
make the link clickable, you need to include the HREF tag,
i.e.
"<a
href="mailto:no&#
115;pam@myser
8;er.com">
nospam@mys&#
101;rver.com</a>"
which
appears as: nospam@myserver.com
Try
it. Copy either of those expressions (WITHOUT the quotes),
save it in an HTML file, and open it in your browser. It looks
and acts just like any other email link, but the spam bots
only see numbers and characters.
Here
are a few free email encoders:
http://www.paksys.com/util/spamfree.php
(JavaScript utility)
http://www.wbwip.com/wbw/emailencoder.html
(JavaScript utility, doesn’t include HREF tag)
http://www.siteup.com/encoder.html
(emails the results to you)
Encoded
e-mail addresses can be read and translated back into the
original ASCII text by almost any web browser, so you can
use encoding wherever you can use HTML. I've replaced regular
email links with encoded links on all of my websites.
Unfortunately
not all forums will let you use HTML. In those cases, you’ll
have to rely on putting the NOSPAM in your email address,
or using only “throwaway” email addresses such as from Yahoo
or hotmail when posting to public places. Another trick: spell
out your email address, i.e. my email address is “sharon at
geolocal.com” or “sharon at geolocal dot com.” Not as good
as being encoded and clickable but better than nothing.
Of
course, spammers are a clever bunch. Whatever we come up with,
they'll find a way around. Pretty soon they'll probably program
their nasty spam bots to translate encoded emails for them.
The
only answer for that is to replace email links with an IMAGE
of your email address. Only human eyes can see that an image
is an email address, so it can’t be harvested. But, *don’t*
link the image to your email address unless it’s encoded –
that would defeat the purpose, which is to make your email
address unreadable by the spam bots.
The
downside is that human eyes will have to manually type your
address to send you an email. Unfortunately, that includes
people you WANT to hear from. There’s no way around that.
Hopefully one day we won’t need to go to such lengths to avoid
what has become the scourge of the internet.
So,
to summarize,
- use
Mailwasher to delete and bounce spam, which hopefully will
get you dropped from spam lists, and
- encode
your email address on web pages and other places where it
can be harvested.
Try
my one-two punch and see if it works for you. If nothing else,
it will give you the satisfaction of knowing spammers are
getting useless messages in their mailboxes too.
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