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If you’re the typical e-mail user, you know about SPAM. You’re angered by it, frustrated by it, and very likely resigned to living with it. Still, you probably hope anti-SPAM efforts will yield better results in the future. Various studies have shown that SPAM now accounts for more than half of all e-mails, and yielded more than $40 billion in financial losses in 2004—more than double 2003 figures. Moreover, a lot of SPAM leads to further intrusion and fraud. SPAM mail might contain “spyware” that’s installed on a user’s machine upon opening the SPAM e-mail. More ominously, SPAM email might deploy “phishing” techniques. Typically, these are legitimate-looking e-mails from familiar-looking sources sent to surreptitiously capture private information. A common phishing scheme is to send a link to a website that appears to the user to be a legitimate financial institution. (Yes, they know where you do your online banking and shopping.) The e-mail asks the person to update sensitive information. Of course the website is a fake, but it’s constructed so well that it fools the user. Fortunately, you can take relatively simple proactive steps to mitigate the debilitating effects of SPAM. Here are some guidelines:
SPAM Checker You can minimize the amount of SPAM that’s sent to you, but you can’t stop it altogether. For you and your company to divert SPAM that has been sent to you from actually reaching your inbox, you’ll either have to install a SPAM checker on your computer or use an ISP that already provides such a service. If you do it yourself, you can do it on your personal computer. At work, your company might decide to install an enterprise-grade system on its mail server. These will scan your incoming e-mails and parse them according to which ones it determines are SPAM or not. SPAM email will go to a special folder; the rest will flow to wherever they usually flow (most often your regular inbox, unless you direct e-mails from specific addresses to other folders). Most people are familiar with these filters, even if they’ve never installed one. For example, if you use Yahoo mail, you may configure your system to direct identified SPAM (by Yahoo’s own SPAM-checking filter) to its “Bulk” folder. You may scan e-mails in your SPAM folder if you’re worried about false positives, but be careful—most people just delete them. Simpler SPAM checkers scan e-mail content for telltale signs of SPAM. Typically, these are familiar SPAM words or phrases often called “filter triggers.” Unfortunately, spammers are adept at avoiding them. Moreover, these simple filters often classify legitimate e-mails as SPAM (socalled false positive). More sophisticated filters are provided by specialized services that, in almost real-time, identify IP addresses of servers that send out SPAM. They then send these addresses to their subscribers, who install special software on their computers, where continuously updated “blacklisted” server lists are maintained. When an incoming e-mail comes from any of these blacklisted servers, it’s isolated. Finally, here are some suggestions for those who send e-mails and want to ensure they’re not SPAM, or mistaken for it:
Legal approaches should mitigate the problem in the future. However, the most significant influencers will be average users who adopt commonsense protocols of e-mail etiquette and practice SPAM avoidance, both as receivers and senders.
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