Friday, December 7, 2012

Guide To Blocking Spam On Wordpress

Wordpress is a great platform for getting your thoughts out to the world. Unfortunately unscrupulous spammers also want to use your blog as a vehicle for spreading useless messages.

The main spam problem on Wordpress is comment spam. The origin of this is that people try to get links back to their own websites by leaving a comment containing a link on your blog. Sometimes the comment left makes little or no sense. Some bloggers have found themselves under attack as spammers use automated bots to find blogs that will allow them to leave a comment.

There is a way around this. The first is to use the plugin that is provided by Wordpress called Askimet. This is available on installation of all new blogs and just needs to be enabled. This plugin has a 'learning ability'. If some spam gets through its filter, mark it as spam (don't delete it) and the program will get more efficient at recognizing spam in the future. Similarly, check the spam messages regularly and if a legitimate comment is incorrectly labeled as spam mark it 'despam' and this will help train the software.

Another plugin that is popular for preventing comment spam is called Spam Karma 2. This program rates each comment and then decides if it is likely to be spam or not. It is available for free.

Another important step to take is to make sure that only registered users can comment. This will help cut down on the junk that is generated by spambots. To do this go to the admin panel and select 'Users must be registered and logged in to comment'.

These precautions will help you cut down the wasted time that you spend dealing with comment spam on your Wordpress blog.

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Why Are a Lot of Spam Messages Written Like Gibberish?

Spammers want their emails to end up in your email box, they want you to open them, and they want to advertise a product, perpetuate a scam, or spread a virus. Whatever their purpose, the emails are annoying and potentially harmful to your computer. A lot of these messages look like they are written in gibberish, which adds to the irritation and senselessness. Why are they written like this?

There are two reasons why spam may appear as gibberish. One is that they could have been written in a foreign language. So what appears to us as unintelligible symbols is actually foreign characters that have not been properly transmitted into English. This is also why there may be multiple misspellings and odd syntax.

Another reason why spam can appear to be nonsense is that purposely misspelling words, adding 0 when you should have o, and other techniques are designed to slip past spam filters. This works because some email filters look in messages for the most common words used in ad pitches and the like. By throwing in random words or letters, many spammers are able to evade the filters and get their messages into your in-box.

It can be hard to know if a message is spam or not, unless you open it. At that point, though, you can be letting harmful viruses loose into your computer. Because of email spoofing, you may receive messages that look legitimate but are not. A reverse email lookup can help stop you from opening harmful messages, as well as keep you from inadvertently deleting real messages.

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The Evil Email Marketer Strikes Again

If you're like me, you get about a hundred junk messages in your inbox a day. This is nothing new, of course, but after all our technological "advances", these scumbags still provide a giant thorn in the proverbial e-side. At the very least, these spammers can get rather creative with their subject lines from time to time, providing me with a genuine laugh for a moment before I blast their message into oblivion.

Perhaps the scariest thing about email marketing is that it works. I know it's hard to believe, but why would such efforts continue to be put into something that doesn't? Unfortunately, there exists a section of the population who weren't born with that ability to sense a deal that's "too good to be true." I suspect it's the same group who pays for groceries at the express checkout with pennies and then drives home doing 20 under the limit in the passing lane.

For the rest of us, it is mind boggling. A mysterious email shows up in our inbox by a guy we've never met, using a Hotmail or Gmail address, with no web site, offering us the best services money can buy. I like to compare this scenario to buying a home theater system, not at a department store but from a stranger, out of the trunk of his car in an empty parking lot under veil of night. No storefront, no credibility, no return policy, no guarantee that both parties wouldn't take your money and run.

So how does a spammer get your email address in the first place? The most common way is through purchased email lists. These lists are compiled from web sites that don't believe in a good privacy policy. By signing up for newsletters or creating an account to shop online, you're potentially giving out your email to people who sell it to spammers. Even adding your email link to your web site exposes it to email "scrapers." (scripts that crawl the web finding email addresses)

If your host or ISP offers disposable email addresses, use them. By creating an email unique to the service you sign up for (ie. john-newsletter@mydomain.com ) I can tell right away that if I get any spam in the future to that email, I know the newsletter I signed up for is sharing my email with others.

A recent report out of the UK says that small business owners lose an average of £2,000 (about $4000 USD) per year in fighting spam (businesszone.co.uk, April 2, 2008). McAfee has even gone so far as to give volunteers pre-paid credit cards, asking them to respond to unsolicited emails selling products and keep a diary of their experience. Their hope is to show the public the dangers of illegitimate email offers in an effort to raise awareness.

Spam is a real problem and will continue to be despite the genuine efforts of some to fight it. However, if the average email user was more informed and actually made a concerted effort to deal with it, the Web would be a far nicer place than it is today. The popular theory has been that if we all had to pay a fraction of a cent for each email we send out, it would eliminate spammers who get away with "email blasting", a practice where thousands of emails are all sent out at once. But until that happens, it's up to the general public to safeguard themselves and do their part in taking up the fight.

For future reference, the Federal Trade Commission offers an email address you can forward your spam to: spam@uce.gov - don't expect a reply; but yes, they assure you that your emails actually go somewhere.

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Spam Filters - Prevention Better Than Cure

You must have seen your mail box full of unwanted messages and how annoying it is to read and delete the unwanted mails. So where do you think they come from and what are they actually?

Let's go into the details of spam and how to combat it. Few people try to disrupt the activities on the internet by overflowing other people's mail box with superfluous messages. Spam creators actually are paid for the emails used to advertise the company's products or services. Spam can be posted from various media sites and forums and they are created in such a manner so that they can bypass the spam filters and even the spam detectors. Spam creators mess with several people who try to avoid unwanted emails.

With the increase of spam creators, the companies are growing more and more concerned about the numerous ways to stop spam mails. Internet users should be observant about the new techniques developed by the spam creators to disguise their mails. It is only through the spam filters that one can attempt to stop the annoying emails. These blockers filter out emails specially those that have come from unknown sources.

Function of a Spam Blocker The spam blocker help to stop spam from reaching your mail box and by this you can save the storage space and time needed for reading the junk emails. There are many spam blockers available in the market and they search for the incoming mails and protect the computer from all kinds of spam. The pop ups are the main sources of information to the spam creators. Once they are clicked upon, they can cause danger to your mail box. Email from known sources may also contain viruses. It is only through a reliable spam blocker that you can operate efficiently and prevent the unwanted mails from blocking your computer.

Most spam filters automatically separate the junk mails into a separate folder so that it can differentiate between a spam and a genuine email and the junk mails are then deleted. Even if a filter is installed in most of the computers, the problem still persists. Having a software installed does not solve the problem totally. It is important to anticipate the loopholes in the performance of this software and take the necessary actions accordingly. Sometimes even the legitimate mails are blocked, so double checking the anti spam software is required in order to ensure that no important transactions are missed out. You have to be innovative in order to stay abreast with the current anti spam products and prevent your business from being damaged. Some of the efficient spam blockers are Spam Bully, Spam Inspector etc.

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How Spam Filter False Positives Harm Your Business

Unless you live in a cave --and one without a computer at that-- you're very familiar with the huge time waster that sifting through mountains of email spam can be. And while spam is a huge annoyance for employees and end users everywhere, the real costs for businesses are in time and money and they're increasing every day. As costs rise, IT people (at SMEs in particular) are desperate for ways to deal with it effectively.

It's estimated that 100 billion spam emails fly back and forth, dirtying up the internet every day. A lot of these emails end up on in business email boxes, and employees are forced to spend their mornings sifting through mountainous piles of spam. All of which is time they're spending not working.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Spam Filters

Installing anti-spam filters is really the only effective way to deal with day-to-day spam within a company. These filters work to separate the wheat from the chaff, so to speak, allowing the good emails through and tossing the junk in the trash. They do this by combining several different types of technology and updating almost constantly. And while the highest quality spam filters do provide relief, sifting out about 98% of a company's spam, they're still imperfect.

Why? Unfortunately, spam filters occasionally have trouble telling what is wheat and what is chaff (to stretch an already-tired metaphor), and toss some important emails out along with the junk. And while they don't occur that often, 'false positives' can still become a problem for business owners.

One solution to the problem of false positive is adjusting the sensitivity of the company's spam filters. The way this works is simple: the higher the sensitivity, the more spam is caught. But the higher the sensitivity, the more valid emails will be taken out with the trash. Increasing the sensitivity of spam filters can cost companies a heck of a lot more money than too much spam after all, customers don't like it when their emails go ignored.

The Direct and Indirect Cost of Anti-Spam Filters

Even one little missed email can get a company in deep water. A law company based out of Colorado, for example, missed an email containing some important information about a court date and ended up missing an important day in court. The cost? They were required to pay all of the fees for the opposing counsel.

How did this happen? To combat spam, the company's IT department had turned up the sensitivity of their email filters. Apparently, the United States District sounded pretty spammy to these super hyper filters, and it costed this company thousands of dollars in fees. Ouch.

While this is a nice and obvious example of how false positives can lose a company money, in most cases it's simply not that cut and dried. Most monetary losses aren't direct; they come from a loss of business and credibility. When an email from a client is gobbled up by the spam filter and a big business deal falls through because the client feels ignored, it takes a lot of work and public relations to get that client back. And sometimes it never happens.

In addition to directly losing a company money, false positives can affect productivity just as much as an overload of spam can. If employees are used to seeing a lot of their important emails get junked, they will have to spend valuable time sifting through their spam folder for genuine emails. How much can that cost? More than you'd think. According to Ferris Research, recovering a genuine email from a spam folder costs an average of $3.50 of that employee's time. Especially if you don't experience many false positives, it may not seem like much but in a company of 500 people who have to fish out two emails from their spam folder a month, it adds up to $42,000. Does that sound like an itty-bitty expense to you?

It doesn't to most other business owners, either. And to reduce the number of false positives --and the amount of business lost-- many businesses don't use any anti-spam filters at all. And while it's hard to judge them for wanting to prevent a loss of business, going without a spam filter opens them up to all sorts of problems. Taking care of spam is just too important.

Striking a Balance

But how do you deal with spam and reduce false positives at the same time? The best method is to set aside all mail marked as spam into a special folder so that users will have access to it, and can check it often. While this may seem time-consuming, with good anti-spam software it really doesn't have to be. The better the software is at recognizing obvious spam, the fewer emails will end up in the junk folder.

As spam filters improve, so do spammers. Because of this, spam filters will probably never be 100% effective-- the ones that will delete every piece of spam will generally delete a few important emails along with it. And the ones that let all the important stuff though will also let in a bit of junk. But using a good, well-configured anti spam software and integrating it with your email server can really reduce the amount of spam that end users receive, as well as the rate of false positives you experience.

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Why is My Mailbox Always Full?

If you've tried to make some decent money online, you'll probably start off all fresh and somehow get all caught up with thousands of emails weekly or even daily and wondering how you could better organize yourself... Yes, spam mails and scam mails are flooding your inbox and in your efforts to filter off the nuisance kind of emails, you might accidentally be filtering off emails that really matter to you and wasting a lot of unrecoverable precious time!

What happened? You might be asking... or you might already know the answers but not realizing it...

See, when you begin to opt in to opportunities or join some form of list which involves some form of subscription or verification, your mailbox nightmare has arrived. That's just the beginning... This is a self-created mess coupled with other people's marketing mess... Then, as an enterprising netpreneur, you start to build your own list(s) and allow people to subscribe or opt in through your websites or blogs or capture pages... Then, you'll find your inbox getting fuller than usual...

Well, here's why. The people who opt in to your list might be your uncool "competition" or some spammy marketer who surprisingly could also be marketers who are making loads online using these unethical spamming techniques. I shall not mention names. They know who they are and they know that there are people who know so too. They would even include some of the big names... This is nothing new. Most of these people are also junkies who are trying to make a quick buck.

See, people who have been online long enough know that if they can just get into someone's inbox, it's a matter of time they make their sales provided their email series can convert. I shall not mention names, but if you see such people appearing in your inbox, what I'd suggest you to do is either filter them into a junk folder... or seek out their email address(es) from your list(s) and unsubscribe them. I'll usually do the former myself.

How did they do it? See, they just need to set up an autoresponder email series, and opt into your list using their autoresponder email address. So, every time your own autoresponder sends them an email, you'll receive their series all over again. Okay, sometimes it's just a single autoresponding email instead of a whole series. Some will even spam you with your own email address and/or spam others as well using a fake email account that seems to originate from you, maybe in the hope to get your domain name into trouble. Something like nonsense@your-domain-name.com. Whichever the case, it's still a form of unethical spamming.

Along with these undesirable emails, you'll get all kinds of scams too! So, how do you solve your inbox problem? The key lies in managing your inbox. If it's too much of a problem, get a new email account. To be wiser, have your personal and business email accounts as two separate email accounts. That will save you a lot of trouble when it comes to the probability of you receiving spam and scam emails.

Please share this article with as many people as you can so that we can fight this kind of unethical spamming more effectively. Thank you for your kind attention =)

With less garbage to deal with, you'll have more energy to deal with things that really matter.

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Protect Your Email from SPAM Bots

One of the easiest ways for your email to get snatched up by a SPAM bot is to have it on your website. Still, many businesses these days fall into the trap and then wonder why they are getting 15-20 SPAM emails a day. Fortunately, there is a quick fix that will allow you to have your email on your website, but in a way that the SPAM bots cannot recognize.

The way to do this is to create an image file of your email address. SPAM bots are designed to skim through text and code to find email addresses, but they cannot understand an image as it is referenced in the code by it's path. The only thing that is important to remember though is while the image is not decipherable by the SPAM bot, it's alt tag may be. For those that are not familiar with the alt tag, it is what will show up if the image does not load so the user still has a description of the image. Please don't take the time to implement this method if you are just going to make the alt tag your email address. My suggestion is make it something like "joesemail" or something like that. This way users who cannot view the image know what it is but the SPAM bots cannot pick up on it.

Using methods such as these are simple yet effective ways to better protect yourself from getting picked up by SPAM bots. Please know though that this is only one way to protect yourself and in order to be fully protected you need to employ multiple methods that will most likely affect how you use the internet in general. As always. be careful where and what you click!

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Do Spammers Have Souls?

The question in the title of this article may seem strange, but it's one that is asked very frequently on a number of levels. For one thing, do they have souls can mean are spammers people or machines? It can also refer to the question often asked about whether they're aware of the sheer frustration they cause. Thirdly, and perhaps most commonly, people wonder if the people who write these irritating emails are actually demons belched up from the underworld of fire and brimstone. Read on to find the answer to each of these questions that have become so common in today's society.

Spam is actually a result of the work of both human and machine. In that sense, spammers do indeed have a soul - on the human side of things. It is people who choose to utilize this form of marketing and apply the various methods that will bring in the largest list of email addresses possible. Here is where the soulless segment comes in, since a great deal of the collection of email address has to do with sending out a crawler to pick up as many emails as possible from where they are listed on thousands upon thousands of websites across the world wide web.

Many people ask if spammers are aware of the trouble and grief they cause to the recipients of their messages. The majority of them are well aware of what they are doing. They are not idealistic individuals who believe that they are performing a service by sending out a sales email to as many people as possible. Instead, they're people who simply don't care about the emotional reaction of the recipients and instead want to reach as many people as possible because some of them will choose to follow the provided link and make a purchase - the goal of the entire scheme.

Lastly, though it may be easy to believe that spammers are demons or some other form of lowly soulless creature...but it must be said that they are simply regular people with a lower ethical standard for making a buck. Of course, they do this under the assumption that they can remain anonymous, which is not always the case when you use a good quality reverse email search site.

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Guilty Until Proven Innocent, Getting Emails Blocked

These spam words are often the same words and phrases often used when talking to prospective clients. However, your prospect's email pre-set spam filter blocked it. You were not sending spam. Instead, you were using a word or words, that many email spammers use.

A DANGER FOR SALES PEOPLE You tend to send a quantity of the same email message out to a group of clients. This may end you up on a blacklist; even through it is no intentional fault of your own. You are merely attempting to follow the procedures for responsible opt-in email marketing. Sometimes it is smart to send yourself a copy of your sales email, before to send a quantity out. Nevertheless, do not assume that because it makes it through your internet service provider's spam filter, it will get by other ISP spam filters.

Email Spam is Unsolicited Bulk Email, also call UBE. If you find someone's email address on an internet site, a web page, or a mailing list, you DO NO have consent to use it. If in turn you purchased it, traded for it, or received the emails as a gift, you DO NOT have consent. Bulk refers to sending out a similar message in over 200 emails a day. If you do this you are a spammer.

The only way sure way to prevent this is to either not use the word below or substitute it with another word or phrase so your sales email will make its way through. NEVER use any of these words in your subject line of your sales message. Some spam filters may let a few of them slip by in the body of the email.

COMMON SPAM WORDS LIST, INCLUDING PHRASES

1. 4U 2. Act Now. 3. Additional income 4. All new 5. Amazing 6. Apply Online 7 . Be your own boss 8. Big bucks 9. Call free 10. Call now 11. Cash 12. Cash bonus 13. Collect 14. Compare rates 15. Congratulations 16. Dear email 17. Dear friend 18. Direct marketing 19. Do it today 20. Don't delete 21. Double your sales 22. Easy Sales 23. Email marketing 24. Expect to earn 25. Fantastic deal 26. Financial freedom 27. For free 28. For instant access 29. Free! 30. Free access 31. Free consultation 32. Free investment 33. Free money 34. Free offer 35. Free preview 36. Free quote 37. Free sample 38. Get paid 39. Get started now 40. Get it now 41. Gift certificate 42. Great offer 43. Guarantee 44. Guaranteed offer 45. Hidden assets 46. Increase sales 47. Increase traffic 48. Information you requested 49. Insurance 50. Investment decision 51. Limited time only 52. Mail in order form 53. Marketing solutions 54. Million dollars 55. Money making 56. More Internet traffic 57. Name brand 58. No catch 59. No cost 60. No credit check 61. No gimmick 62. No investment 63. No medical exams 64. No obligation 65. No selling 66. No strings attached 67. Not intended 68. Offer! 69. Offer expires 70. Once in lifetime 71. One time 72. Opportunity 73. Opt in 74. Outstanding values 75. Please read 76. Potential earnings 77. Print out and fax 78. Profits 79. Promise You 80. Pure profit 81. Real thing 82. Satisfaction guaranteed 83. See for yourself 84. Serious cash 85. Stop 86. Stops 87. Subscribe 88. Supplies are limited 89. Take action now 90. The best rates 91. This is not spam 92. Time Limited 93. Unlimited 94. You have been selected 95. Visit our web site 96. We hate spam 97. What are you waiting for? 98. Winner 99. Winning 100. Your income

With the increase in spam, protection has come increasingly sophisticated to guard against emails. Almost all Internet Service Providers (ISP's) use these email blockers. This is a problem though when trying to send your email sales message. There is no doubt that this software blocks out spam. Not in the sales person's favor, it can block legitimate emails as well. Knowing the key list of spam words can help prevent non-delivery problems. It can also keep you from unfairly tagged as being a spammer.

Small businesses are often the hardest hit by increasingly strict messages intended stop spam. Some industry insiders feel the bigger problems can be caused by trying to control the collateral damage caused by trying to get rid of it. Try to tell your ISP that you are unjustly being singled you and are innocent is difficult to get a response. Often it can be a periods of days or weeks, and even then all your emails are going to be watched like a hawk. The ISP's can fix or reverse the problem in their own due time. Meanwhile if you are blocked,. your emails are almost completely shut down.

CAUTION ON BUYING EMAIL NAMES Nor do not consider using Commercial Emailers to bypass your Internet Service Provider. These professional bulk email blasters, try to find every loophole possible to get pass the spam blocking guards. They are the bad boys, rated at producing 99% of today's spam. As soon as when way is shut down, another is opened up. Be careful when purchasing an email blasting list for spamming. Much of the list was never what the recipient requested to begin with. Lists of responders are collected and added to a list you ordered that they should not be on. The email blaster is only hoping that you get enough response so that you will be happy with the quantity of response. Therefore do not be surprising if the email blasting company adds phony responders (paid to act interested and respond to your request). Buyer beware.

For more articles to read on spam, marketing, recruiting, or increasing sales, there are plenty. Visit http://www.agentsinsurancemarketing.com Author, Don Yerke has over 200 articles published through out the internet.

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Free Spam Blocker - A Review of Cactus Spam Filter

The amount of spam being sent is on the rise. Unsolicited email now accounts for over 50% of email traffic. There are steps that you can take to cut down on the volume that you receive. The last line of defense is to have a personal spam filter on your computer. There are a number of filtering solutions, although most come at a cost. One of the free pieces of software is called Cactus Spam Filter. Here's our review.

The product is easy to download and to install. In fact that is one of the best things about the product - ease of use. Don't be worried that you are going to have to read through another massive manual to get the thing up and running. Refreshingly, the instructions are only one page long.

Once you have set up the software, any messages that it suspects are spam are tagged. This tag is a message that is added to the subject line such as "CACTUS SPAM". It is then a fairly simple task to create a new folder in Outlook and set up a rule that says move all emails containing the words "CACTUS SPAM" in the subject to the new spam folder.

You can then periodically check your spam folder to make sure that the software hasn't tagged any emails from your friends by mistake. Once you've made sure there are no 'false positives', you can delete the remaining spam. The beauty of this system is that you ultimately make the decision to delete which emails. The system cannot delete anything for you; it therefore can't delete anything by mistake.

The software also has a 'training' feature so the more you use it the more it gets used to the type of emails that you mark as spam. This makes it more effective at detecting junk emails in the future.

For a free piece of software, Cactus Spam Filter works very well. It is easy to install and simple to use. What more could you expect?

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Should You Be Worried About Spambots?

Spambots are automated software programs that roam the Internet looking for email addresses. They then gather them into a database that is used to blast junk emails to. Should you be worried about Spambots? After somebody published my email address on the web I was inundated with spam. I eventually had to resort to changing my email address. I'm now much more careful as to who I give my address to.

Spambots are able to operate because email addresses have a familiar presentation. They simply read pages on the web and search the code looking for addresses around an "@" symbol. There are also snippets of HTML code that bots can find such as "mailto". It doesn't matter whether these are found on webpages, chatrooms or on discussion forums; the spambot is able to use it.

There are a number of ways of trying to fool theses pieces of software. You could use an image with your email address or replace the "@" symbol with an (AT). Both of these mean that your link will no longer be clickable and open up the user's email client. Instead they will have to manually type in the email address.

A better solution is to use a contact form on your website rather than an email link. The form contents can be delivered to your email address, but it is a undetectable to spambots.

A more recent trend is the rise of Spambots that leave junk comments on forums and blogs. This is done to either promote a certain product or to simply leave links pointing back to a site. This second scenario can be useful to boost search engine rankings. The most up to date bots can even read the CAPTCHAS - those mangled letters that are meant to tell whether the form is being filled by a human or robot.

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How Do Spammers Find My Email Address?

Spammers, as telemarketers do a phone number, get your e-mail in two major ways, both of which you have some control over. The first way that spammers get your personal information is through public and private directories from a variety of sources, including e-mail address lookups. The other is through previous business relationships.

Just as there are directories for phone numbers, there are also lists of e-mail addresses. There are public directories that search web based and government servers, as well as the more common private directories maintained by individual servers. Spammers can access private directories using e-mail address lookup sites, but you can also use these services to help protect yourself from unsolicited e-mails by tracing a spammer's e-mail address. While an e-mail address lookup searches for e-mail address, a reverse e-mail search provides the name and server information to which an account is registered.

Your number gets added to directories in a number of ways, but like phone numbers, you can ask for your e-mail to remain unlisted. Simply contacting your e-mail service provider should make you feel more secure about spammers and how they get your number. Of course, spammers won't stop bothering you if you simply request an unpublished e-mail, because they can still get your e-mail in another way, through legitimate business relationships initiated by you. This means anytime you give your e-mail to someone, be that a business, a social networking site friend, or simply a random website, you are taking the risk that this is a source spammers don't use for e-mail addresses.

While you may not be able to completely prevent spammers from getting your e-mail, you can take action against particularly annoying unethical groups. A reverse email search allows you to trace a spam message back to e-mail server from which it was originally sent.

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Spammers Are Bummers

Even though many authors and speakers have already said over and over again to avoid spamming there are still hundreds of marketers doing it. Why? Is it really worth the time and effort just to get delivered into spam?

Spamming is like trespassing in real world, in short you are not allowed in wherever that may be. There are a lot of reasons why you shouldn't spam. And I know you might have heard a lot of it but I'll just write it down anyways so that you are reminded.

o Your chance to be read is .01% or less

That's almost nothing. Spam folders are known to have trash emails. Only a few people look into it and most of the time they are probably only looking for something that their friends have mistakenly sent. Good on you if you catch their attention and make them open it. But that would be like wishing for a rain in dry season or wishing for a sun at midnight.

Now, there are a lot of opt-in lists for sale, do not get hooked on it. Because some of them are just random emails, or something that do not even exist already. If you want your email marketing to be fruitful then work hard for your opt-in list, offer free membership, or free ebook, whatever you fancy just work it out yourself, do not ask for a free ride, because the consequences are not worth it.

o You can get banned

In forums, spammers get banned, so if you try to spam to get a sale immediately then your existence on that particular forum would also be finished immediately. And often you'll also be black listed on other forums as well, so before you try on spamming, think twice first, and make sure that you think ahead, not just on what you can get now but on what you can have in the future. So if you really want to create traffic using forums, then you should try earning their trust first by posting relevant stuff before telling / selling them your products.

Forums are for making friends that will eventually be your customers, not making customers then eventually will be your friends.

o You might get penalized

Some unethical Internet marketers created something called "link farms". The idea was quite simple a huge network of servers linking to various sites that in theory would increase your links in thus increase your popularity. But search engines have also created something that could detect legitimate links, which makes link farms some sort of a spam. Some are even penalized by search engines by having so much links to websites that are not related to them. The best way to get around this is to work a little harder though it might consume much more time, but your efforts will soon be rewarded with higher spots on search engines and legitimate spots as well.

Spamming as they say is illegal, though it requires lesser work but often get flushed out the toilet, unread and unwanted. That is not how internet marketing works, it's called business because you work for every little bit of it, but is paid off with every little cent as well. So, I say, spamming is only for bummers, it is for those who are too lazy to be successful, for those who doesn't learn, don't be one of them. Don't spam.

Track Down the Spammer - Search by Email Address   Which Email Client Has the Best Spam Filter?   Take Extra Precautions and Stop Spam   The Scourge of Spam and How to Tackle It   Spam Filtering For Small Businesses - Increase Productivity and Protect Your Data   

What If You Could Get Paid Everytime You Got Spammed in Violation of CAN-SPAM? Would You Do It? Yes

Finally, an answer for what to do with all of that spam that finds your way into your inbox that violates the CAN-SPAM act of 2003. Profit from it!

The gist of how to create a spam reducer and profit center is as follows.

1) You place a mailto: link with an image captcha onto your favorite website, forum, or social networking site, anywhere you would normally put a mailto: link for others to contact you.

2) When real people use your link, they are prompted to agree that the mail they are sending is in compliance with the CAN-SPAM act of 2003, and the inform them that the email address automatically populated is illegal to email to. They simply follow the instructions to enter the correct address from the image and send you your spam free email.

3) Bots and automated email address harvesters given the special poisoned email address that they may send mail to, in violation of CAN-SPAM, though humans are visually warned. (if you want to be technical, the information is there for the bot to pass you up also), but as they only search for specific keywords, so the warning ans use agreement goes over their robotic heads, and they spam you anyway, in documented violation of the law.

4) You get your spam free email, and all spam is sent to the poisoned address, which auto replies to the sender with an email letting them know that they are in violation of the CAN-SPAM act, and are given the following choices for how to respond.

a. call us on the phone and prove it was just a mistake (some real people cannot follow directions), so that all can be forgiven, and the mail retrieved from the poison mail box.

b. Pay you cold hard cash not to take them to court.

c. If they choose not to respond, it is usually not a human that sent you the mail anyway. If the spammer does not respond within 10 days, then the spammer is assumed to have, but waives their publishing rights to the content in question (remember to include that in the body of your auto populated mailto: link) and it is then emailed directly to your blog for publishing, and the advertising revenue created by the affiliate links you assume ownership over just might collect some money for you.

d. Instead of fearing to place your email in high traffic areas of the Internet, you now rush to such places with no qualms. Some using this technique may even rush at the chance to kidnap more Spam for profit!

I hope this is a huge success.

What would you do if you got paid every time you got spam in your inbox?

Why don't find out?

Track Down the Spammer - Search by Email Address   Which Email Client Has the Best Spam Filter?   Take Extra Precautions and Stop Spam   The Scourge of Spam and How to Tackle It   Spam Filtering For Small Businesses - Increase Productivity and Protect Your Data   3 Simple Ways to Reduce Spam   

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