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Dealing with spam.
There's always a thread here about dealing with spam, and plenty of advice about how to filter, sort and otherwise handle it.
Wouldn't it be better to not get it in the first place? I rarely get spam, even though I have quite a large online presence and I thought I would share how I do it. Get yourself a domain, I use Easily.co.uk, but there are plenty of others offering similar services and different pricing structures. I paid £9.99 for my .org domain for the first 2 years, I recently renewed it for £30 for the year. With the domain, you get redirection of up to 20 addresses to your mail account. (I still use my NTL account for this). A lot of spam addresses are harvested online, so you should be careful who you give your "real" address to. The redirect system has an address for "unknown addresses", so set up the addresses you want: me@mydomain.org = my@ntl thewife@mydomain.org = thewife@ntl another@mydomain.org = whoever@wherever All other addresses are redirected to your default "unknown" address (in my case, my NTL address, the same as me@mydomain.org) Here's the trick: If you need to give an email address online and you don't really trust that it won't be put on a spam list, make one up. You usually need to receive this mail to get a password or similar. The address I used for this forum was nthell@mydomain.org, Because It's unknown to the redirect, it comes to me anyway. If I start getting spam on that address, I just redirect it! sent it straight to abuse@nthell. You never need to see the spam again, your primary address is protected, and you get to keep the same primary address as long as you have the domain, regardless of how many times you change ISP. Everybody's happy! |
Re: Dealing with spam.
yeah I am thinking of doing something similiar myself, as I have my own email server and domain's.
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Re: Dealing with spam.
Here's another solution that can help when you need to supply a valid email address to sign up for something.
Create a temporary one using Mailinator and supply that address instead of your normal one. Then, when mail arrives at your Mailinator inbox, access it through the web interface. Be careful because anyone who knows your address can read your mail but it's ideal as a one-shot email address. |
Re: Dealing with spam.
Or NEVER release an address (except to trusted friends) that isn't a disposable alias - eg.
http://www.spamgourmet.com http://www.spammotel.com The Mailinator service is not much help if you need to send - but is great if you want a zero-commitment address to receive a one-time signup email - and remember the short retention - if you expect an email on Mailinator, you need to be checking every few hours, so it's no use for anything where they may legitimately want to contact you. Spammotel lets you "lock out" an address if it's abused. Spamgourmet lets you "charge" an address with a certain number of receives, recharge it, terminate it, or create/terminate an unlimited alias - Giving 3 messages allowed is probably enough to handle most single "transactions", without much leeway for abuse. |
Re: Dealing with spam.
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Incog. :) |
Re: Dealing with spam.
I've not changed my email patterns or anything like that - but since I've changed to tiscali I've not had a single spam, not one.
The last time I checked my ntl emails (which I still can for some reason) - I had some 6,000 (that's 1 month's worth) - I deleted them all to free up the servers a bit :) |
Re: Dealing with spam.
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