Spam Reviews: What's in your in-box?
Do you receive
lots of junk email messages from people you don't know? It's no
surprise if you do. As more people use email, marketers are
increasingly using email messages to pitch their products and
services. Some consumers find unsolicited commercial email - also
known as "spam" - annoying and time consuming; others have lost
money to bogus offers that arrived in their email in-box.
Typically, an
email spammer buys a list of email addresses from a list broker, who
compiles it by "harvesting" addresses from the Internet. The
marketer then uses special software that can send hundreds of
thousands - even millions - of email messages to the addresses at
the click of a mouse.
To reduce the
amount of unwanted commercial email you receive:
·
Try
not to display your email address in public. That includes newsgroup
postings, chat rooms, websites or in an online service's membership
directory.
·
Check the privacy policy
when you submit your address to a website. See if it allows the
company to sell your address. You may want to opt out of this
provision, if possible.
·
Read
and understand the entire form before you transmit personal
information through a website. Some web sites allow you to opt out
of receiving email from its "partners" - but you may have to uncheck
a preselected box if you want to opt out.
·
Decide if you want to
use two email addresses - one for personal messages and one for
newsgroups and chat rooms.
·
Use
an email filter. Check your email account to see if it provides a
tool to filter out potential spam or a way to channel spam into a
bulk email folder.
If you receive
unwanted spam email, you can:
·
Report it to the Federal
Trade Commission. Send a copy of any unwanted or deceptive messages
to uce@ftc.gov. If you want to complain about
a removal link that doesn't work or not being able to unsubscribe
from a list, you can fill out the FTC's online complaint form at www.ftc.gov. Your complaint will be
added to the FTC's Consumer Sentinel database and made available to
hundreds of law enforcement and consumer protection agencies.
Whenever you complain about spam, it's important to include the full
email header.
·
Send
a copy of the spam to your ISP's abuse desk. By doing this, you can
let the ISP know about the spam problem on their system and help
them stop it in the future.
Complain to the sender's ISP. Most ISPs want to cut off spammers who abuse their system.
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