How to avoid getting into spammers' email lists tips

The fight between spammers and people who get spammed continues. Whether you are a novice on the Internet, or you use e-mail for a long time, you need to come up with a plan how you will withstand spam. Even these simple tips will help you be one step ahead the spammers and make a spam flow as less as possible.

Have you ever thought about how spammers obtain your email address? One of the methods spammers use is harvesting the emails on the Internet. They don’t do it manually since they need millions of addresses. They automate the process of collecting email addresses with special programs. Spambots are one of the tools that spammers use. A spambot is a program which browses through websites and search for legitimate email addresses. These email addresses are then harvested and stored in big databases. Spammers then use those lists to send their advertisements and fraudulent “get rich quick” plans. They can also sell and re-sell the email lists in order to get money.

Keep reading ...

How spammers obtain your email address and why they send Spam

You probably know that Spam is unsolicited and undesired e-mail message. Spammers are the people who send Spam. Spam is a serious problem. It is important today as never before because almost every other email message we receive is Spam. So, the question arises how spammers get your email address and why they send you Spam. Spammers can obtain your email address in three ways.

One way is to guess a mailbox name for a publicly listed domain name. Many organizations have the email addresses where the first part of the email address is a general word such as “info”, “sales”, “accounts”, “support”, etc. People often use the email addresses beginning with their first name, for example, John, Sandra, Julia. Spammers simply put the first names before the @ symbol followed by a domain name, and get possible email addresses.

Keep reading ...

What is SPAM? How to identify and block it?

Almost everyone who used to communicate via e-mail has ever found in the Inbox the messages from people he doesn’t know proposing some services or products. All unsolicited and undesired messages you receive are SPAM. The emails of this kind usually offer pharmaceutical products, diet methods, sexual enhancements aid, and “get rich quick” plans. You can also meet bogus sales pitches, sales opportunities, and different types of scams. In addition to stock scams, in which spammers encourage you to invest money, a new spam-scam gambit called phishing is becoming very popular now. This scam is aimed to obtaining people’s private information such as user name, password, credit card details, etc. An example is an email coming from PayPal or Ebay asking you to go to the company’s web site and update your account. If you do it, the spammers will record your keystrokes and your private details will be disclosed to them. And have you ever received pitiful letters from a widow or a relative of the former ruler of Nigeria? Sure you have. It’s a famous Nigerian fraud that is still having a place on the Internet. Don’t be enticed by the millions they would promise you. All they want is your bank account details in order to rob you.

Tip! In addition to a safe message content preview, G-Lock SpamCombat allows you analyze the message header in detail: From, To, Subject, Received and other header fields. You can add the spammers' emails to the blacklist with one mouse click only.

How do you identify spam among legitimate messages? You usually look at the sender’s name, which may be unknown to you or contain some gibberish. You also read the subject line of the message. As a rule the subject line of spam emails concerns gambling, pornography, or an offer to make a fortune in 24 hours. But the spammers are also able to create an email identical to legitimate one coming from a respected source. In other cases, the subject lines may indicate that the message is a reply to your email. A general way to distinguish spam is to read the To and From header fields in all the messages you receive. If you see strange, anonymous or scrambled alpha-numeric email addresses (for example, gt4590xx@domain.com) then you have spam. 

Keep reading ...

← Previous 01 02 03 04 Next →