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Spam is unsolicited bulk advertising via email which made its first appearance in the mid of 90s, i.e. as soon as lot of people were using email to make this a cost-effective form of advertising. By 1997, spam was considered as being a problem, and the first Real-Time Black List (RBL) appeared in the same year. Spammer techniques have developed in response to the appearance of more and better filters. As soon as security firms evolve effective filters, spammers change their tactics to avoid the new spam blockers. And it leads to a vicious circle, with spammers re-investing profits into developing new techniques to evade new spam filters. The situation is going out of control. Initially, spam was send directly to users. Spammers didn't even need to disguise the sender information. The earlier spam was easy enough to block. If you black listed specific sender or IP addresses, you were protected. In response, spammers began spoofing sender addresses and forging other technical data’s. How to avoid spam Keep at least two email addresses. You should use your private address only for personal communication. The public address should be the one you make use of to register on public forums, in chat rooms, to subscribe to mailing lists etc. Never publish your private address on publicly available resources. Your private address should not be easy to spoof. Spammers use combinations of obvious names, words and numbers to build probable addresses. Your private address should not merely be your first and last name. Be imaginative and personalize your email address. If you have to issue your private address electronically, mask it to avoid having it harvested by spammers.
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is simple to harvest, as is Joe.Smith at yahoo.com. If you require publishing your private address on a web-site, do this as a graphics file rather than as a link. Treat your public address as an impermanent one. Probability is high that spammers will harvest your public address fairly quickly. Don't be afraid to modify it often. Always use your public address to roll in forums, chat rooms and to subscribe to mailing lists and promotions. You might even think using a number of public addresses in order to mark out which services are selling addresses to spammers. Never reply to spam. Most spammers confirm receipt and log responses. The more you respond, the more spam you will collect. Do not click on unsubscribe links from doubtful sources. Spammers send fake unsubscribe letters in an effort to collect active addresses. You certainly don't want to have your address tagged as active. It will just add to the amount of spam you receive. If your private address is revealed by spammers, change it. This cannot be convenient, but changing your email address does help you to keep away from spam, at least for a while. Conclusion: Make certain that your mail is filtered by an anti spam solution. Consider installing an individual anti spam solution. Just open email accounts with providers who put forward spam filtration prior to mail delivery. The spam industry is likely to follow in the footsteps of other illegal activities, go underground and engage in a prolonged cyclic battle with law enforcement agencies.
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