Friday, February 7, 2014

How do I stop spam from entering my hotmail?




homer742


The junk mail filtering within hotmail hasn't helped at all; it falsely flags more good mail than bad. I've tried using Outlook Express with a spam filter, with little results. Maybe I have to keep trying that........?
Anyway, I'd love to have a way to control spam without having to use a pop3 client. Any tips?
Thanks.



Answer
In the Internet age, not only are you fighting junk mail in your mailbox, but you've also got exorbitant amounts of spam in your virtual inbox. Not only are they annoying, but these e-mails can introduce viruses and spyware into your computer. While there are several different ways to combat spam, here's a start.

Steps
Stop posting your e-mail address on a public forum or website. It is estimated that 95% of all junk e-mail is caused by a person publicly disclosing his or her e-mail address. There are many robots and scripts that automatically scan websites for e-mail addresses. Also, sometimes humans actually grab e-mails of websites to use them for sign-up offers in order to get free stuff (iPods, Ringtones, etc.). If you must provide contact information, try writing it out in creative ways such as Me ~at~ yahoo ~dotcom~.
Avoid:

Popular newsgroups - robots often scour these lists for addresses
Software like BonzaiBuddy or similar programs - if these companies donât immediately sell your information to a spam company, they are subsidiaries of spam companies themselves and the software is spyware
Chat rooms like Yahoo Chat or IRC - spammers or spambots are actively mining in popular chat rooms like AOL and Yahoo chats, where e-mail addresses can be correctly guessed just by adding the proper @whatever.com to the username of a chat room visitor
Use spam blocking tools. Most webmail providers offer them, or you can download one.

Use the "This is spam" button if your email provider has one. This submits the email to their spam-control people who can take care of business and improve their anti-spam filters.
If you have a Yahoo! account you can use their discardable addresses method
Use Spam Gourmet, or others like it, with any email account
Use the 'BLOCK' list and add the spammer's domain name only. (However, this may not that effective, since spammers normally only use temporary addresses.)
Limit incoming e-mails to those in your address book and have all others put into a "Junk" folder, which you can skim through quickly and clear regularly.
Report spam. Before you delete your spam, forward your spam to: spam@uce.gov as this is the Spam box for FTC (Federal Trade Commission). Mail sent to this box is investigated. If it is indeed spam, the original sender can be charge $500 per email. The more mail they get from different users but same spammer, the more it's likely to be investigated.
Be crafty when filling out forms that ask for your e-mail address. Many web forms ask only for your name and email address. Put in a series of letters such as Swseqw for your name. Then set up a filter so emails from that newsletter or form will arrive in a separate folder if the email contains that fake name. If that e-mail turns out to be spam, set your mail program to delete all e-mails that come in with the fake name.
Use disposable addresses to identify and shake off sources of spam. Have one main account, and never, ever give this address to anyone, even your friends, who all they need to do is send you an innocent e-card to get you on a spam mailing list.

Make a separate account for different purposes (one for friends, one for entertainment sites, one for your financial websites, etc.) If you use a lot, write down which is which so you don't forget.
Set all those addresses to forward the mail to your main account so that you don't have to check multiple accounts.
If you start receiving spam through one of your alternates, you can trace it to one of your disposable addresses and simply delete that account.
Track which groups of recipients return the most spam and be more selective.



Tips
Consider using a unique domain name for your e-mail address. You may be able to turn on a wildcard(*@yourdomain.com) address so that any email sent to that domain, no matter what's before the @ symbol, will arrive at your personal inbox (check your site provider's FAQ for instructions). This gives a lot of flexibility because you can tell them anything as your email address, as long as the domain after the @ symbol is yours. If you get spammed to a certain address, just set that account up (generally in SMTP settings) and have all that email automatically deleted("bit-bucket").



Warnings
Never respond to spam (not even to "remove" your e-mail address from the list). They will only send you more because they know you exist. Responding only promotes their cause, to sell you something you didn't order. - They live off 6% of responders.

What is the best way to ask a question on the Internet?




Leena


What is the best way to ask a question on the Internet?

Why aren't Usenet newsgroups as popular as they once were? Now there is Yahoo Answers, Google Answers, WikiAnswers, Live QnA, mailing lists and countless Web forums.


The problem with those is that they require you to register for each forum. Where as newsgroups can be used with one account for all topics.


Thanks,
Lola



Answer
Yahoo! Answers. It takes like two seconds to sign up.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment