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March/April 2010 eNewsletter
The War on Spam
Over 90% of email is unsolicited
and unwanted. Junk emails flood the electronic delivery
system with messages that we just don't want and phishing
schemes fool millions each year. These abuses waste
time and resources and are one of the biggest productivity
drains that businesses face.
Unfortunately, you can't get rid of all spam but you can
manage the problem and protect your business from incidental
damage. Make sure you have a clear email policy and
train users so they don't fall for spam tricks.
- Use a Spam Filter - although
spammers work on beating the filter, this is your best
first defense.
- Never reply to spam, not even to unsubscribe - often
this just confirms your email is valid.
- Disable automatic downloading of HTML pictures -
spammers get confirmation that you opened the message if
the graphics (pictures) are downloaded.
- Don't participate in chain emails - these often
harvest email address and many recipients find them
irritating.
- Don't respond to email requests that ask for
personal information or money - this is the most common
phishing scam.
- Use privacy settings on your accounts - especially
for social media sites, don't publically list your email
address.
- Use care when giving your email - if you list your
email on any site (or on your business card) remember it
increases your chances of being spammed.
- Don't spam others - if you have a eNewsletter or
send email information be sure you follow proper
protocol and allow your recipients to easily
unsubscribe.
- Turn off read and delivery receipts and automatic
response to meeting requests - these responses are used
to validate your email address.
- If you receive spam in your
inbox, you can forward it with the proper header to
uce@ftc.gov.
More
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