Understanding How Spammers Work Can Save You Time And Reduce The Spam You Get
by Balraj Dhaliwal
Nobody likes receiving spam and having to spend time dealing with it. Even
with sophisticated filtering and avoidance mechanisms discussed in my previous
articles entitled "Use A Spam Filtering Tool To Manage Spam And Save Hours
Everyday" and "7 Steps To Effectively Take Control Of Your Inbox And Reduce
Spam", these unwanted spam messages keep on appearing. By understanding how the
system works, we can effectively take steps to significantly reduce the amount
of spam that we receive daily.
What we have to understand is that email marketing is by far the most
effective way to promote products and services on the internet today. The basis
of this system it to collect as many email addresses as you can and repeatedly
send email messages out to them. There is a legitimate way to do this and then
there is the way spammers do it.
The legitimate way is to collect email addresses only from people who
volunteer it to you on a website in return for some information that you offer.
In addition to this every email sent out must include a link or instructions on
how to unsubscribe. I would take it one step further and say that unsubscription
must be instantaneous. Having to wait for a few days is unacceptable with the
software tools available today. Following this method, you will only receive
email messages that you have opted-in for and as soon as you are not getting any
value out of it, you unsubscribe.
The spammers mode of operation is to collect email addresses by any and all
means available. This could be by building software spiders to crawl websites 24
hours day looking for email addresses on any page. Usually they search for the
HTML tag "mailto:" but as users have stopped hyperlinking in response, the
spiders are getting more sophisticated and are putting together text like "john
dot smith at domain dot com" into the proper valid email address "john.smith@domain.com". Some websites
list all their employees contact emails on one page and is a prime target for
spam. Harvesting guestbooks where emails are displayed is also a very common
practice.
Other methods are more malicious and involve virus-like or worm software
being installed on your computer and feeding the names in the address book back
to a spam server that collects them.
Spammers trade email addresses for money. This is why the system is out of
hand - it is an income producing activity. Every email address has a value to it
and no matter how little the value, putting together a list of 100,000 can
provide a neat income for a spammer. Most spammers have spam lists many times
larger than this.
Spammers also include the unsubscribe link at the bottom of spam emails.
These links when clicked and actioned, tells the spammers that this email
address actually got through to a live person and that email address is now
moved onto a much higher value list and is traded for more money. Those of us
who have actioned these links have found the flood of spam coming in to vastly
increase within only days.
So now to the question of how to use this knowledge to reduce the spam you
get?
First, understand that everytime you give out your email address to a
website, that it can potentally be sold and traded. Therefore, if you are unsure
about it, use an email address that is not your primary one. Webmail services
like Hotmail and Yahoo Mail are perfect for this. You only get the messages when
you want them and log into those services. I've used a Yahoo Mail address for
this for years now. Everytime I log in there are more than a thousand messages
but the one that I want to look at is at the top. I never have to delete these
messages, Yahoo takes care of it automatically. The only requirement is that I
log in to the service within a set period usually 90 or 120 days to keep the
account active.
Once you are comfortable that the site concerned is legitimate, you can then
change your email address to your primary one. On the other hand, if you start
getting spammed, then you do nothing, let the spam emails build up and get
deleted automatically by the system.
In my article entitled "7 Steps To Effectively Take Control Of Your Inbox And
Reduce Spam" I discuss an elegant way to safely give out email addresses and
shut them down in case they get spammed. This is by far the most effective
method that I have used.
Other things to watch out for?
Spammers are facing tougher times and they are finding it harder to get new
email addresses. While this is a good sign that means the general public are
getting more educated, it does mean that we have to be careful of where our
email addresses are shown or advertised. For example, magazines and newspapers
often are great places for a spammer to collect email addresses. This is a much
slower method but if we think about it, these email addresses are of much higher
value because somebody has paid money to advertise and so it is bound to be a
real address. This means that we have to think laterally in order to stay ahead
of the spam game.
Last but not least, we can surely help significantly reduce the problem by
not responding to any spam email message whether it is by clicking on a link,
replying to the email or unsubscribing using a supplied link. If you really must
look at the site, just type in the domain name part of it into your browser and
leave out everything after the domain name. This will take you to the site
without the spammers tracking identification code.
Together we can surely put a dent in this system by understanding it and
staying one or a few steps ahead of spammers.
About The Author
Balraj Dhaliwal is an Internet Consultant for BSD Domain Registry, a well
respected and liked domain and hosting provider because of its no nonsense
simple approach to getting things done. Visit BSD Register at http://www.BSDRegister.com.
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