The Spam Guide
All About Spam
Spam is unwanted and unsolicited email that is sent to your email
address. Sometimes these emails try to get you to click on a link or
buy a product. They might try to get you to open an attachment or
forward the email to other people. Sometimes these emails look like
bounced emails or are disguised as real mail from legitimate companies
or from friends. Usually these emails contain viruses or scams. In
this article we will discuss everything you need to know about spam.
Why Am I Getting Spam?
Spammers get your email address by one of many different methods. Some
companies and/or websites will gather email addresses from people who
sign up on their website, and will sell these email lists to spammers.
Spammers can also write programs that "crawl" around the Internet
looking for email addresses on websites. So if your email address is
visible on a website- odds are you'll get tons of spam. Another method
spammers use is to send email to millions of randomly created
addresses, hoping they will hit a real one. If your email address is a
common one, like sales@ or info@ or johnsmith@ then you are likely to
get lots and lots of spam.
Why Is Spam A Bad Thing?
Spam can fool people into giving out their account numbers, login info
or personal data- to enable the spammer to commit identity theft or
fraud. Sometimes people are tricked into sending money to spammers. Or
they buy products that don't really work and can even be dangerous.
Spam that contains viruses can cause problems with your computer and
spy on your computer activities. Spam can also become a huge problem
when it gets so numerous that it clogs up your inbox and takes a long
time to sort through. Some people get so much spam that they give up
on email completely- it's a big shame that spam is damaging a
technology as useful as email.
What Can I Do About Spam?
The most important thing you can do is to keep your main email address
private- don't give it out to websites or to companies you don't
trust. A good idea is to have a secondary address created (for example
a gmail or yahoo free email account) that you can use for signing up
for things online. Then the spammers won't get your real address.
Another important thing is to choose an email address that is not a
common one. For example: contact@ will get lots of spam guaranteed.
Avinus and some other web hosting companies provide spam protection
services with your web hosting account. We can enable virus scanning
of emails and spam protection which can be adjusted from 1 to 10 for
weaker or stronger protection. You can even block specific senders.
Don't read spam, don't click on spam links and don't open attachments.
Just delete all your spam emails. Usually the opt-out / unsubscribe
links on the bottom of spam emails don't work- they just tell the
spammer that your address reaches a real person. If we all ignore spam
and don't buy anything from spammers, then it will no longer be
worthwhile for them to keep sending spam. However, it only takes one
person out of millions of spam sent to make a purchase for it to be
worthwhile to the spammers- the cost to the sender of sending spam is
very low.
Lobby your government for strong laws against spam and punishments for
spammers found in your country. Ask your web services provider what
else you can do.
Conclusion
Spam is one of those things where despite all our efforts, we probably
can't stop 100% of it. Anti-spam technology is not perfect, and it can
only help to a small extent. The best thing you can do is to be picky
about who you give your email address to. If we all collectively
delete and ignore spam, we can make it a waste of the spammers' time.
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