Antispam Blogs



             


Monday, March 9, 2009

Getting the satellite TV deals that suit you the best


Nowadays, hundred of satellite TV scam websites had pop up as satellite TV become one of the best sellers in the town. Buying satellite TV online become more and more risky as consumers always find themselves trapped in fake or overrated deals. Scammers, fraud deals, high shipping costs, late installation, bad customer services, outrages cancellation fees …getting your satellite TV systems can be quite a nightmare.

If you wonder how you can avoid all these hassles and get the right satellite TV deals, here’s what I suggest:

  • Get the right satellite TV providers
  • Get the right satellite TV programming package
  • Get the right satellite TV retailers

Getting the right satellite TV providers

Dish Network and DirecTV are currently the majors in United States satellite TV business. These two satellite TV providers offer around the same deals and they both are equally popular. What differ these two satellite companies are their monthly subscription fees, start up cost, as well as their programming choices.
In term of monthly subscription fees, DirecTV is more expensive than Dish Network. DirecTV basic programming package starts at around $40 while Dish Network cost around $30 monthly for the standard packages.

As you can see from their promotional campaign, common Dish Network deals offer free satellite TV system up to 4 rooms, free basic Dish Home Protection Plans, free shipping, free standard installations, free HD upgrades, free DVD player, and DVR that records up to 100 hours. While offering around the same thing, DirecTV normally charged a small amount of shipping fees if you order more than two satellite TV systems.
Programming channels are more or less the same for both Dish Network and DirecTV. However, DirecTV is much more popular among sports fans as they offer some attractive premium sport packages like NFL Sunday Ticket that Dish Network doesn't have. On the other hand, the advantage with Dish Network is that you get more International and HD ready channels.

Getting the right programming package

If you are going after Dish Network, standard programming packages are American’s Top 60, 120, 180, and Everything Pak; DirecTV standard programming packages are DirecTV Total Choice standard, Plus, and Premier. I will not get in depths in this discussion as the article is not meant for promoting any one of these packages. If you are not sure on which programming package to go for, I suggest you to compare them side by side.  When selecting satellite TV programs, be aware that you should get what is right for you. Avoid getting extra programming package that you have no enough time to enjoy it.

Getting the right satellite TV retailers

A relaible satellite TV retailer is most crucial in getting a good satellite TV deal. Picking up the right retailer can earn you a bargain in the deal; however bumping into an inexperience retailer or scammers will definitely bring nightmares to you.

Often, satellite TV scammers claim that they offer the best satellite dish deals and promotions. They might offer fake promise on their deals, extremely low monthly subscription rates, next-day installation, and unlimited number of free satellite systems to lure satellite TV shoppers. But once customers signed up, they find hidden activation fees, high shipping costs for free extras, installation dates continuously missed or pushed back, as well as outrageous cancellation fees.
In order to avoid such hassles, I suggest satellite TV shoppers to shop only from reputable retailers. The Internet gives us the convenience to research about the satellite TV retailers. Learn about the background of those retailers before you key in your credit card info: Are they an authorized retailer? Are they in business for long enough? Are they offering secure order page if they offer online purchase? How is the customer feedback on their services? Do they provide customer services via phone calls? Is the order 100% guaranteed with full refunds?

For more details, check out some third party reviews on satellite retailers at this page:

Conclusion

Without doubts, satellite TV deals are very good bargains if you manage to get things right. Low monthly subscription costs, high picture quality, wide programming selections, and lots of freebies for first time customer. However, consumers are advised not to spend within means and should avoid unnecessary purchase. Do not get more satellite TV systems than you need just because retailers are giving them for free,  you might end up paying extra monthly subscriptions for something that you don’t use.

Teddy LC., expert writter on consumer products reviews. Check out his latest satellite TV related website and get recommendations on DirecTV or Dish Network deals, review Dish Network and DirecTV retailers, and other issues on

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Monday, March 2, 2009

Stuffing the Spammers!

I'm really, truly fed up with spam. Every day when the spam arrives and Norton Security moves it into the Norton Anti-spam folder of my Outlook email client, I wonder how anyone can be so incredibly stupid as to waste their time sending me such garbage.

Let's face it; I never read it. I never buy anything from unsolicited sources or do anything as a result of spam. I detest it! And God knows I don't need viagra, however many times it's offered.

What fool would send anyone a message about a mortgage application approval when he has owned his house for years?

What fool would write offering me a peep at her new porn site? I'm not interested in porn ... I prefer the real thing. Offer me something tangible and I may get excited.

I guess you probably feel the same.

Unfortunately, the plague of spam isn't going to fade away any time soon, although authorities (at least in Australia) have started taking legal action and imposing hefty penalties for spamming. Hallelujah!

As a last resort, I decided to make my own small contribution to reducing the spam plague. If each of us does something, the cumulative effect will be damaging to the spammers. Here's what I did. I've collected thousands of email addresses that arrived in spam messages and ended up in my blacklist. I decided I'd give those people using automatic harvesting software an opportunity to suck up all those addresses and reuse them.

I've dedicated quite a few pages on my site that have nothing but the email addresses from the blacklist. That is, the addresses of the spammers, most of which are false and don't lead to anyone ... at least not to anyone who can read (otherwise I'd include an obscene message).

When the spam harvesting software goes through my site, it won't find a single working email address in my site proper, but it will stumble on a goldmine of addresses and load them into it's database. It will be stuffed full of email addresses, none of which work. The spammers will pay to send them out and they'll bounce somewhere, hopefully right back to them.

Imagine what would happen if we all did that? There would be so many dud addresses floating around that harvesting would be a waste of time. the spammers would all go away and do something legitimate ... perhaps.

You and I would get some relief from these annoying intruders in our email inboxes.

If you are in a position to load your site with a few thousand dud email addresses, why not give it a go and Stuff the Spammers?

First released May 2005. Copyright Robin Henry 2005

Robin Henry is an educator, human resources specialist and Internet marketer whose firm, Desert Wave Enterprises, helps individuals and businesses improve their performance by using smart processes, smart technology and personal development. He lives at Alice Springs In Central Australia. Visit Desert Wave Enterprises.

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Monday, February 2, 2009

The Trouble With Spam Is....

Reacting to spam won't solve it. Taking a pro-active approach is sometimes all that's needed.

Each day we all face the same challenge. Spam. It doesn't matter if you're a home computer user or the head of IT for a multinational limiting or totally preventing the distribution of junk email to your computer(s) is now a daily chore.

The sheer frustration that spam causes combined with the number of lost man hours adds up to junk email being a very real problem for all involved. You have to filter through all the junk to find your own personal or work email. This on its own is annoying enough. When you consider the security risks from spyware, trojans, diallers and attempted identity theft spam becomes much more than just an annoyance - it becomes a minefield for any computer user.

So what can you do to block spam? The first step each user should take is to simply limit the number of people who know your personal email address. If you have a work email address then just use it for work. For home users only distribute your email address to people you know and trust. This simple move can cut your spam problems by 50%.

But what about all those online forms I need to fill in? No problem. Use a free email service like Hotmail or Gmail for this purpose. Treat it as a throwaway account that you can use as a buffer between your true personal email address and the rest of the world. Let it fill up with junk email and then just login once a week and delete everything you see.

Your password. It's amazing how many people set the password for their email account to abc123 or something similar. These passwords are incredibly easy for spammers to guess and would give them easy access to your mail account. The password for your email account should follow corporate standards of being 6 - 8 characters long and be alphanumeric (a mixture of numbers and letters). Make it longer if you can. Using a weak password is just asking for trouble.

If you're already receiving a ton of spam then you'll need to invest in a spam blocker. There are free spam blockers you can download and also also their paid equivalents. A great spam blocker can cost you as little as $30 and you'll see an immediate reduction in the amount of spam you're receiving.

Over and above installing software on your computer (especially for Mac users as your choices are limited) you could sign up for one of the web based challenge response spam blockers like Mailblocks or SpamArrest. Both of these services are ideal for somebody who's on the move a lot. Also because they're web based there's no software to install so they're perfect for Mac or PocketPC/Palm users.

Taking a pro-active anti spam stance is the next step. If you get junk email from people then check the mail headers and report any offensive email to the hosting company or ISP involved. Never, ever reply to spam directly. This simply confirms to the spammer that your email address is active. Also never click on any hyperlinks in any junk email - this again confirms your existence and can lead to a virus being downloaded directly onto your PC. Filter the spam, report the abusers, delete the remaining junk email.

Spam can be stopped. Not by some corporate giant or genius programmer. It can be stopped by each of you individually. Spammers rely on the widespread availability of email addresses and for people to reply to these emails or click on the links within the emails. The sooner people stop reacting emotionally to spam and simply filter, report and delete the offensive mail itself the sooner the lucrative market of bulk email will dry up for the spammers.

This article was provided courtesy of Spam-site.com which reviews spam blocker software and other anti spam utilties.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

There is Gold in that Spam Search Engine Tactics for the 21st

<b>There is Gold in that Spam Search Engine Tactics for the 21st Century<BR>Its not often youll hear anyone praising spam. Until today.</b></p><b>There is Gold in that Spam Search Engine Tactics for the 21st Century<BR>Its not often youll hear anyone praising spam. Until today.</b></p> <P>Ok, ok, ok -- we all hate it. When I check my e-mail box for the numerous domains that I own, I have hundreds if not thousands of spam messages. It had gotten to the point that I could not tell between real e-mail and spam. I remember not logging into one account or a week, only to find out when I did that there were over 1,000 e-mail messages of which 995 were spam!<BR><BR>First off, what kind of strategies can you use to fight spam? Here are a few that have worked very well for me:<BR><BR>1.DO NOT put your e-mail address on your website in plain text. There are several other ways to give your e-mail address out. The one that seems to work very well is by creating a small GIF or JPG image and placing your e-mail address in there then displaying the image on your website.<BR>2.Make use of FORMS. Rather than have your visitors e-mail the domain, create a form for them and have the form e-mail the domain OR another address. This is a very successful way for visitors to contact you. You could go one step further, and add a verification word to the form so that the form does not get abused.<BR><BR>Now that we have talked about two simple ways to fight spam, lets talk about why you may not want to chuck all your spam message away. Am I crazy? Nope, just some common sense niche building techniques at work here.<BR><BR>You remember those supermarket tabloids, right? Have you ever leafed through them? Have you ever read the advertising in them? You know, it is pretty expensive to place advertisements in those magazines mainly because of the distribution they have and because people buy them. Now do you think that an individual will pay thousands of dollars per year to advertise in the tabloid, it if was not delivering results?<BR><BR>Advertising is only placed in magazines, newspapers and tabloids if they deliver results. Companies spend tens of thousands of dollars (if not more) ensuring that their advertising is delivering the expected results. They track and monitor everything that they do, nothing is left to chance. But you knew all this already.<BR><BR>I'm not trying to equate tabloid advertisements with spam -- but I think you get the picture.<BR><BR>So how can you find gold in spam? Simple. When you check your message, see if there is one type of message that you are receiving more than the others. Filter past the gambling, and adult entertainment and focus on stuff that you and I could use every day. You will see e-mail advertisements for education, careers, divorce planning, private investigations and several other areas of interest.<BR><BR>If you have been paying attention to this, then you now know that maybe you should be targeting those niche areas. I say niche, because if you look at the content of the messages you will see that they are very specific. Some of the education messages I get are for particular schools, or programs like website development, search engine optimization, business management, small business development or entrepreneurship. Same with the career e-mails I get, they are always targeted at a specific profession nursing, truck drivers or other medical related fields.<BR><BR>So how can this help you? Supposed you are getting 100 messages per week about careers. You go through these and group them by profession. Once you have done this you notice that 75% of the messages are about nursing. You now have a profession you can target for additional research.<BR><BR>You first start performing some preliminary research to see if this niche is worth targeting.<BR><BR>If your research shows that it is worth pursuing, then look at what types of phrases are being used and who is in the top 10, 20 or 30 sites providing this type of information. Look at the pure search engine listings, but also pay attention to the paid advertising since this will give you a good idea if you will make money by targeting this niche.<BR><BR>Once you have done your homework, and find that this is indeed a field worth pursuing then it is time to start developing your website, and thinking about the type of content you will be offering to your site visitors. You may want to think about offering free courses on nursing, what it is, how someone can become a nurse basically what you would want to know before you decided to pursue this as a career.<BR><BR>It is very easy building your business, if you spend a little time and look at the unconventional ways of determining what business you need to get into that is, what niche you should be targeting. <BR><BR>A little research and your spam e-mail box could help you make a name for yourself in the world of internet marketing.</P> <p> <h1>ABOUT THE AUTHOR</h1> <br> <div><P>Mohammed Bhimji is the owner, and developer of Turbo Traffic Engine <A rel="nofollow" href="http://www.turbotrafficengine.com">www.turbotrafficengine.com</A>&nbsp; an application that makes it easy to develop niche portal websites that are optimized for the search engines.</P></div> </p>

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Friday, July 4, 2008

Spam: Bozo Filters

A bozo filter is a feature of email and newsgroups clients to
allow you to automatically delete messages which you do not want
to receive. This is typically used to eliminate flame spam
messages so you don't have to see them.

For example, I am subscribed to a number of topics on Yahoo
Egroups. In general these groups have pleasant conversations
among people who stay on topic and don't flame. There are two
individuals, however, who are abusive and make no substantial
contributions and see the need to post flames and sarcastic
remarks regularly. I could just ignore (and delete) these
messages myself, or I could (and have) set up a bozo filter in
Outlook which automatically deletes all messages from their email
address. This ensures that I don't need to read the messages from
these people except as part of a reply to another message (rare).

Using the filters supplied with virtually all modern email and
newsgroup clients, you can seriously cut down on spam and other
unwanted messages. However, to be effective, you have to maintain
your filters on a regular basis. Here's what I do: whenever I
receive an email which is undesirable, I scan it quickly to
identify something which would identify it. This might be the
FROM address, the SUBJECT (some or all of it) or various phrases
within the message body. If the FROM address is strange (which it
often is in spam messages), then it's better to key off the
subject or text body. These identifiers are then added to my
filters. In other words, I tell the email client "if you see this
phrase in the message body, then please automatically delete the
message.

Note that you must be careful that the phrases are specific to
the type of message you want to delete. Otherwise, you will wind
up deleting messages which you actually want to receive. For
example, let's say a common phrase is "sex movies for sale". You
should add the whole phrase to your filter, not a short word like
"sale" which could unintentionally delete messages about other
things.

Note that your filter should move the messages to the trash, and
you should always take a quick scan of the messages in your email
trash can before deleting. This will help prevent you from
accidentally deleting a valid message. Filters are not perfect.

Some good phrases to add to your bozo filters are:

Click here to be removed.
bulk e-mail
bulk e mail
MLM
multilevel
I just found your address by searching through
adult
adults only
If you are under 21
This is a one-time mailing
This is not a spam
million dollars
senate.gov
Section 301, Paragraph (a)(2)(C) of S. 1618
Bill 1618 Title III
Since your email address was listed on a related Web site
Claim your prize

Once you've spent some time creating a few bozo filters, you
will begin to realize the power at your fingertips. Using the
filtering components of products such as Outlook and Outlook
express, you can automatically file emails in specific folders,
forward them without your intervention and of course delete spam.
Have fun and use these to help improve your productivity.
allow you to automatically delete messages which you do not want
to receive. This is typically used to eliminate flame spam
messages so you don't have to see them.

For example, I am subscribed to a number of topics on Yahoo
Egroups. In general these groups have pleasant conversations
among people who stay on topic and don't flame. There are two
individuals, however, who are abusive and make no substantial
contributions and see the need to post flames and sarcastic
remarks regularly. I could just ignore (and delete) these
messages myself, or I could (and have) set up a bozo filter in
Outlook which automatically deletes all messages from their email
address. This ensures that I don't need to read the messages from
these people except as part of a reply to another message (rare).

Using the filters supplied with virtually all modern email and
newsgroup clients, you can seriously cut down on spam and other
unwanted messages. However, to be effective, you have to maintain
your filters on a regular basis. Here's what I do: whenever I
receive an email which is undesirable, I scan it quickly to
identify something which would identify it. This might be the
FROM address, the SUBJECT (some or all of it) or various phrases
within the message body. If the FROM address is strange (which it
often is in spam messages), then it's better to key off the
subject or text body. These identifiers are then added to my
filters. In other words, I tell the email client "if you see this
phrase in the message body, then please automatically delete the
message.

Note that you must be careful that the phrases are specific to
the type of message you want to delete. Otherwise, you will wind
up deleting messages which you actually want to receive. For
example, let's say a common phrase is "sex movies for sale". You
should add the whole phrase to your filter, not a short word like
"sale" which could unintentionally delete messages about other
things.

Note that your filter should move the messages to the trash, and
you should always take a quick scan of the messages in your email
trash can before deleting. This will help prevent you from
accidentally deleting a valid message. Filters are not perfect.

Some good phrases to add to your bozo filters are:

Click here to be removed.
bulk e-mail
bulk e mail
MLM
multilevel
I just found your address by searching through
adult
adults only
If you are under 21
This is a one-time mailing
This is not a spam
million dollars
senate.gov
Section 301, Paragraph (a)(2)(C) of S. 1618
Bill 1618 Title III
Since your email address was listed on a related Web site
Claim your prize

Once you've spent some time creating a few bozo filters, you
will begin to realize the power at your fingertips. Using the
filtering components of products such as Outlook and Outlook
express, you can automatically file emails in specific folders,
forward them without your intervention and of course delete spam.
Have fun and use these to help improve your productivity.
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets
at http://www.internet-tips.net - Visit our website any time to
read over 1,000 complete FREE articles about how to improve your
internet profits, enjoyment and knowledge.

 

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Monday, June 23, 2008

How Can I Stop Getting Spam?Sean Proske


A Tutorial for Webmasters
By Sean Proske
mailto:sproske@thewebhostcompany.com

Are you getting too much spam? We all are, but if
you're a webmaster the word spam takes on a whole
new meaning.

It's not uncommon for the luckiest of email
users to receive a dozen or so spam messages each
day, while those of us who aren't so fortunate
receive hundreds.

The casual home user tends to be more fortunate,
so this article is devoted to those of us with one
or more website because webmasters are getting hit
by spam ... and hit hard.

The reason ... a website doesn't do you much
good if you don't give potential customers a way
to contact you, and that normally means posting an
email address on your website, where it is
vulnerable to email address harvesting tools used
by spammers. Domain registration records are also
a common source used by spammers.

In order to conduct business online you now need
to sift through the endless barrage of offers for
herbal viagra, pornography, pyramid schemes, and
so on.

With such a large volume of spam to contend with,
it's likely you've lost sales due to missing
important emails that simply floated away in this
sea of spam. And there's no way to really
calculate the cost of that lost business. If
you've missed email then how can you ever know how
much business you've lost?

If you want to solve the problem, you need to be
proactive because the sad reality is that if you
do nothing, it will only get worse until finally
it reaches the point where your email account has
become totally and completely unmanageable.
Fortunately there are a few options available to
you.

--------------------------------------------------
Securing Your Domain Registration Against Spammers
--------------------------------------------------

First let's address the whois database, which is a
publicly accessible database in which your domain
registration record is listed ... and that
includes your email address. It's not uncommon
now for people to be spammed at a brand new email
address within hours of registering a new domain.

Go Daddy http://www.godaddy.com is a domain
registrar that now offers private domain
registrations. At the time of writing this
article, they are the only registrar who currently
offers this service. Hopefully in time, other
registrars will pick up on this idea and offer the
service too.

With a private domain registration, which costs
only a few dollars more than a regular
registration, your contact information including
your email address will not be publicly accessible
in the whois database.

That's guaranteed to cut down on spam quite
significantly as this very important source of
addresses that spammers use, will no longer
provide your address to them.

If you don't wish to obtain a private domain
registration, then there is another option that
will be equally effective. Set up a new email
address that you use only for the purpose of
providing registration information for your domain
name. You can easily scan email sent to that
address for messages from your registrar, and
delete the rest without having to read it.

--------------------------------------------------
Securing Your Website Against Spammers
--------------------------------------------------

The other major source, and by far the biggest
source of email addresses for spammers is of
course the mailto links on your own website.
Email address harvesting or extraction software as
it's known is cheap, easy to use, and readily
available ... and it's very effective. That
means there are a lot of spammers out there with
easy access to your email address.

Chances are hundreds or even thousands of spammers
using such software have already harvested your
address. And what can you do about this? You
need to provide a way for your customers to reach
you by email, or you'll lose business. There are
steps you can take to prevent your email address
from being harvested and used by spammers though,
while still providing legitimate visitors to your
site with a way to email you.

One solution is to make all the mailto links on
your site point to a form instead, which will
still provide a means for people to send you
email. Provided you use a CGI script that
doesn't require the address to be embedded
within the form itself, you can shield your
address from email address extractors.

If you don't want to require people to fill out
a form to email you from your website, then you
can get a little more creative. It is possible to
put a mailto link on your site that when clicked
will still launch the sender's email program,
and start a new message with your address in the
To field ... but without having to embed your
email address in the mailto link where spam
software can snatch it. Click below to see an
example of how it works.

http:/ hewebhostcompany.com/cgi-local/email.cgi

It looks like a normal URL, and there's clearly no
email address anywhere in the link, but when
clicked, instead of loading a web page in your
browser as you may have expected, your email
program opens up.

How's that possible you might ask? Simple. A
little magic with CGI using Perl or PHP will do
the trick. A free copy of a script that does this
is bundled with Postmaster Pro, available at
http://www.postmasterpro.com which is discussed
below.

--------------------------------------------------
What About Spammers Who Already Have My Address?
--------------------------------------------------

So far we've discussed a few fairly simple
techniques designed to prevent spammers from
obtaining your email address in the first place.
But, how do you deal with the spam you're
already getting? Your address is already out
there. The solution is to either block or filter.

For either, you'll need software. For blocking, I
recommend Postmaster Pro. If you prefer to filter
then Spam Assassin is highly recommended. Both
run on the server, so there is no need to download
spam before filtering it out. That's a huge time
saver if you're not yet on a high-speed
connection. It also makes it a bit less likely
you'll end up downloading a virus since email from
untrusted senders, i.e. spammers will be
significantly reduced.

------------------------------------------------
Spam Blocking Software
------------------------------------------------

Postmaster Pro which is available at
http://www.postmasterpro.com takes a novel
approach to blocking spam. It only allows email
to be delivered after people who've sent you
email have been placed on an approved sender list.
But the interesting thing is that people who send
you email can put themselves on your approved
list. This is done simply by clicking a link in
an email that automatically gets sent to them the
first time they send email to you, which is
perfect for those of us who don't know in
advance whom we should put on the approved list,
i.e. if you're running a business online. It
also makes building and maintaining such a list
very simple.

Given the fact that spammers normally use invalid
return addresses, and those who do use valid
return addresses seldom read email that's sent
there, let alone respond to it (they receive
thousands of failed delivery notifications,
complaints, remove requests, and autoresponder
messages every time they do a mailing) ... it's
a very effective technique with no chance of
blocking legitimate email, as is the case with
filtering.

--------------------------------------------------
Spam Filtering Software
--------------------------------------------------

For those who would prefer to filter ... Spam
Assassin is perhaps the best option. It is
available at http://www.spamassassin.org. Once
you have Spam Assassin installed, it will provide
you with very powerful and flexible filtering
tools. Spam Assassin is a mature product, having
been around for quite some time. If you're
going to filter, Spam Assassin is about as good as
it gets.

As with any filter though, you do run the risk of
missing legitimate email from time to time. There
really isn't a good way to tell how often this is
happening unless you want to read all the email
that gets filtered out, which negates the whole
point of filtering. If you set your filters
permissively enough though, you should be
reasonably safe. For the first month or so after
installing any filter, you should continue to read
every single email in order to make sure it isn't
set too restrictively to allow legitimate email
through.

By using the techniques mentioned in this article,
you can take back your mailbox, and dramatically
reduce, if not eliminate spam.

--------------------------------------------------
Sean Proske is the CEO and founding partner of
thewebhostcompany.com which has provided reliable
and affordable hosting since 1996.
http://www.thewebhostcompany.com
mailto:info@thewebhostcompany.com
--------------------------------------------------
2003 by Sean Proske

You have permission to publish this article
electronically or in print, in your Newsletter, on
your website, or in your E-Book, as long as the
author's Resource Box is included with the
article.
A Tutorial for Webmasters
By Sean Proske
mailto:sproske@thewebhostcompany.com

Are you getting too much spam? We all are, but if
you're a webmaster the word spam takes on a whole
new meaning.

It's not uncommon for the luckiest of email
users to receive a dozen or so spam messages each
day, while those of us who aren't so fortunate
receive hundreds.

The casual home user tends to be more fortunate,
so this article is devoted to those of us with one
or more website because webmasters are getting hit
by spam ... and hit hard.

The reason ... a website doesn't do you much
good if you don't give potential customers a way
to contact you, and that normally means posting an
email address on your website, where it is
vulnerable to email address harvesting tools used
by spammers. Domain registration records are also
a common source used by spammers.

In order to conduct business online you now need
to sift through the endless barrage of offers for
herbal viagra, pornography, pyramid schemes, and
so on.

With such a large volume of spam to contend with,
it's likely you've lost sales due to missing
important emails that simply floated away in this
sea of spam. And there's no way to really
calculate the cost of that lost business. If
you've missed email then how can you ever know how
much business you've lost?

If you want to solve the problem, you need to be
proactive because the sad reality is that if you
do nothing, it will only get worse until finally
it reaches the point where your email account has
become totally and completely unmanageable.
Fortunately there are a few options available to
you.

--------------------------------------------------
Securing Your Domain Registration Against Spammers
--------------------------------------------------

First let's address the whois database, which is a
publicly accessible database in which your domain
registration record is listed ... and that
includes your email address. It's not uncommon
now for people to be spammed at a brand new email
address within hours of registering a new domain.

Go Daddy http://www.godaddy.com is a domain
registrar that now offers private domain
registrations. At the time of writing this
article, they are the only registrar who currently
offers this service. Hopefully in time, other
registrars will pick up on this idea and offer the
service too.

With a private domain registration, which costs
only a few dollars more than a regular
registration, your contact information including
your email address will not be publicly accessible
in the whois database.

That's guaranteed to cut down on spam quite
significantly as this very important source of
addresses that spammers use, will no longer
provide your address to them.

If you don't wish to obtain a private domain
registration, then there is another option that
will be equally effective. Set up a new email
address that you use only for the purpose of
providing registration information for your domain
name. You can easily scan email sent to that
address for messages from your registrar, and
delete the rest without having to read it.

--------------------------------------------------
Securing Your Website Against Spammers
--------------------------------------------------

The other major source, and by far the biggest
source of email addresses for spammers is of
course the mailto links on your own website.
Email address harvesting or extraction software as
it's known is cheap, easy to use, and readily
available ... and it's very effective. That
means there are a lot of spammers out there with
easy access to your email address.

Chances are hundreds or even thousands of spammers
using such software have already harvested your
address. And what can you do about this? You
need to provide a way for your customers to reach
you by email, or you'll lose business. There are
steps you can take to prevent your email address
from being harvested and used by spammers though,
while still providing legitimate visitors to your
site with a way to email you.

One solution is to make all the mailto links on
your site point to a form instead, which will
still provide a means for people to send you
email. Provided you use a CGI script that
doesn't require the address to be embedded
within the form itself, you can shield your
address from email address extractors.

If you don't want to require people to fill out
a form to email you from your website, then you
can get a little more creative. It is possible to
put a mailto link on your site that when clicked
will still launch the sender's email program,
and start a new message with your address in the
To field ... but without having to embed your
email address in the mailto link where spam
software can snatch it. Click below to see an
example of how it works.

http:/ hewebhostcompany.com/cgi-local/email.cgi

It looks like a normal URL, and there's clearly no
email address anywhere in the link, but when
clicked, instead of loading a web page in your
browser as you may have expected, your email
program opens up.

How's that possible you might ask? Simple. A
little magic with CGI using Perl or PHP will do
the trick. A free copy of a script that does this
is bundled with Postmaster Pro, available at
http://www.postmasterpro.com which is discussed
below.

--------------------------------------------------
What About Spammers Who Already Have My Address?
--------------------------------------------------

So far we've discussed a few fairly simple
techniques designed to prevent spammers from
obtaining your email address in the first place.
But, how do you deal with the spam you're
already getting? Your address is already out
there. The solution is to either block or filter.

For either, you'll need software. For blocking, I
recommend Postmaster Pro. If you prefer to filter
then Spam Assassin is highly recommended. Both
run on the server, so there is no need to download
spam before filtering it out. That's a huge time
saver if you're not yet on a high-speed
connection. It also makes it a bit less likely
you'll end up downloading a virus since email from
untrusted senders, i.e. spammers will be
significantly reduced.

------------------------------------------------
Spam Blocking Software
------------------------------------------------

Postmaster Pro which is available at
http://www.postmasterpro.com takes a novel
approach to blocking spam. It only allows email
to be delivered after people who've sent you
email have been placed on an approved sender list.
But the interesting thing is that people who send
you email can put themselves on your approved
list. This is done simply by clicking a link in
an email that automatically gets sent to them the
first time they send email to you, which is
perfect for those of us who don't know in
advance whom we should put on the approved list,
i.e. if you're running a business online. It
also makes building and maintaining such a list
very simple.

Given the fact that spammers normally use invalid
return addresses, and those who do use valid
return addresses seldom read email that's sent
there, let alone respond to it (they receive
thousands of failed delivery notifications,
complaints, remove requests, and autoresponder
messages every time they do a mailing) ... it's
a very effective technique with no chance of
blocking legitimate email, as is the case with
filtering.

--------------------------------------------------
Spam Filtering Software
--------------------------------------------------

For those who would prefer to filter ... Spam
Assassin is perhaps the best option. It is
available at http://www.spamassassin.org. Once
you have Spam Assassin installed, it will provide
you with very powerful and flexible filtering
tools. Spam Assassin is a mature product, having
been around for quite some time. If you're
going to filter, Spam Assassin is about as good as
it gets.

As with any filter though, you do run the risk of
missing legitimate email from time to time. There
really isn't a good way to tell how often this is
happening unless you want to read all the email
that gets filtered out, which negates the whole
point of filtering. If you set your filters
permissively enough though, you should be
reasonably safe. For the first month or so after
installing any filter, you should continue to read
every single email in order to make sure it isn't
set too restrictively to allow legitimate email
through.

By using the techniques mentioned in this article,
you can take back your mailbox, and dramatically
reduce, if not eliminate spam.

--------------------------------------------------
Sean Proske is the CEO and founding partner of
thewebhostcompany.com which has provided reliable
and affordable hosting since 1996.
http://www.thewebhostcompany.com
mailto:info@thewebhostcompany.com
--------------------------------------------------
2003 by Sean Proske

You have permission to publish this article
electronically or in print, in your Newsletter, on
your website, or in your E-Book, as long as the
author's Resource Box is included with the
article.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sean Proske is the CEO and founding partner of
thewebhostcompany.com which has provided reliable
and affordable hosting since 1996.
http://www.thewebhostcompany.com
mailto:info@thewebhostcompany.com

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Friday, May 30, 2008

3 Criteria for Controlling Enterprise Spam

Trust

Or: T*ake Y O U R email ba & ack + From the Sp@mmers! 0400constrictor bubble snake informational



If you have a business, then you have a spam problem. The efficiencies of communicating through e-mail not only benefit organizations like yours; they also benefit the spammers who profit off of sending pernicious e-mails to millions of people every day. In fact, spam is so cost-effective that it costs less than $0.0004 to send a single spam. Thats 25 emails for just one penny!

The Spam Problem

According to Meta Group, Companies are routinely getting 20,000 daily spam messages, putting significant burden (e.g. bandwidth and storage consumption) on mail relays, SMTP gateways, and internal mail servers. To make matters worse, companies have invested millions of dollars in spam-fighting technologies that have been rendered obsolete within months of purchase by the innovation of spammers who have found ways to thwart new technologies along the way. Examples of spammer ingenuity abound. As recently as mid-2003 Bayesian logic was touted as the immutable defense against spam, but by early 2004, most spam had evolved to be Bayesian-proof. There are even programs available for download on the internet that will test your spam for you before you send it to make sure it will get past the spam filters. Clearly, the solution is to partner with a company that specializes in fighting spam. Who you choose is a crucial step because you dont want your solution to become obsolete within a few months, and you certainly dont want to create a problem with false positives.

Criteria 1 Diversity The Cocktail Approach to Filtering Spam

The first step in addressing spam is identifying it. But, unlike viruses, spam identification is not straightforward. There is no smoking gun that clearly indicates to a detection system that a message is a spam. For instance, the common approach of looking for keywords such as Viagra or Free, misses many spams. The method of blocking known spammer IP addresses lags and does nothing to deter determined spammers. Any effective spam detection system must employ multiple techniques for identifying and measuring the probability that a message is spam including the newer heuristic analysis and real-time collaborative spam filtering tools.

Criteria 2 Flexibility Different Strokes for Different Folks

A fundamental issue with spam is defining what exactly constitutes spam. One person may consider any bulk e-mail spam, while another highly values the opt-in bulk e-mails they receive. Different organizations may have policies with very different definitions of what is allowed. A good anti-spam solution must allow administrators to enforce these different rules and even allow them to apply different rules to different users, preferably by integrating with policy tools and user databases such as LDAP directories. It should be able to support differing thresholds for different spam results and adjustable confidence values in spam detection techniques. It should allow administrators to customize responses for inbound or outbound traffic. Rules should allow re-labeling, blocking and quarantining of messages, as well as a test mode where rules are tried without impacting mail flow. Ideally, your solution will include an integrated policy manager, which enforces corporate policy across the entire e-mail system, and allows different rule sets for different users and groups.

Criteria 3 Expertise Know Thy Enemy

Spammers are constantly improving their methods, particularly as corporations have finally begun to fight back. Vendors must be able to develop and deploy policies, signatures, keywords and values to corporations using their solution. They should be developed based on data from a distributed network of customers and other Internet detection points by a team of spam blocking experts. Only by constant improvement can any solution continue to be responsive to spammers even in the face of new threats.

Or: T*ake Y O U R email ba & ack + From the Sp@mmers! 0400constrictor bubble snake informational



If you have a business, then you have a spam problem. The efficiencies of communicating through e-mail not only benefit organizations like yours; they also benefit the spammers who profit off of sending pernicious e-mails to millions of people every day. In fact, spam is so cost-effective that it costs less than $0.0004 to send a single spam. Thats 25 emails for just one penny!

The Spam Problem

According to Meta Group, Companies are routinely getting 20,000 daily spam messages, putting significant burden (e.g. bandwidth and storage consumption) on mail relays, SMTP gateways, and internal mail servers. To make matters worse, companies have invested millions of dollars in spam-fighting technologies that have been rendered obsolete within months of purchase by the innovation of spammers who have found ways to thwart new technologies along the way. Examples of spammer ingenuity abound. As recently as mid-2003 Bayesian logic was touted as the immutable defense against spam, but by early 2004, most spam had evolved to be Bayesian-proof. There are even programs available for download on the internet that will test your spam for you before you send it to make sure it will get past the spam filters. Clearly, the solution is to partner with a company that specializes in fighting spam. Who you choose is a crucial step because you dont want your solution to become obsolete within a few months, and you certainly dont want to create a problem with false positives.

Criteria 1 Diversity The Cocktail Approach to Filtering Spam

The first step in addressing spam is identifying it. But, unlike viruses, spam identification is not straightforward. There is no smoking gun that clearly indicates to a detection system that a message is a spam. For instance, the common approach of looking for keywords such as Viagra or Free, misses many spams. The method of blocking known spammer IP addresses lags and does nothing to deter determined spammers. Any effective spam detection system must employ multiple techniques for identifying and measuring the probability that a message is spam including the newer heuristic analysis and real-time collaborative spam filtering tools.

Criteria 2 Flexibility Different Strokes for Different Folks

A fundamental issue with spam is defining what exactly constitutes spam. One person may consider any bulk e-mail spam, while another highly values the opt-in bulk e-mails they receive. Different organizations may have policies with very different definitions of what is allowed. A good anti-spam solution must allow administrators to enforce these different rules and even allow them to apply different rules to different users, preferably by integrating with policy tools and user databases such as LDAP directories. It should be able to support differing thresholds for different spam results and adjustable confidence values in spam detection techniques. It should allow administrators to customize responses for inbound or outbound traffic. Rules should allow re-labeling, blocking and quarantining of messages, as well as a test mode where rules are tried without impacting mail flow. Ideally, your solution will include an integrated policy manager, which enforces corporate policy across the entire e-mail system, and allows different rule sets for different users and groups.

Criteria 3 Expertise Know Thy Enemy

Spammers are constantly improving their methods, particularly as corporations have finally begun to fight back. Vendors must be able to develop and deploy policies, signatures, keywords and values to corporations using their solution. They should be developed based on data from a distributed network of customers and other Internet detection points by a team of spam blocking experts. Only by constant improvement can any solution continue to be responsive to spammers even in the face of new threats.
CipherTrust is the leader in anti-spam and email security. Learn more by downloading our free whitepaper, Securing the E-mail Boundary: An overview of IronMail or by visiting www.ciphertrust.com.

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Friday, May 23, 2008

Demand for Spam? It exists

Do you like spam? No, I'm not kidding. Everybody knows what spam is, almost everybody seems to have learned by heart simple advice like "do not click ..." "do not respond..." , "do not buy..." but
On March 23, 2005 Mirapoint and the Radicati Group, a consulting and market research firm, released preliminary results of their end-user survey on email hygiene. "This preliminary data is surprising and somewhat shocking to us," said Marcel Nienhuis, market analyst at the Radicati Group.
The survey shows that some end users haven't learned the lesson and still make the same blunders.

Blunder 1 -- clicking on embedded links within spam (not including the unsubscribe link) -- 31% of respondents have done it at least once. The most dangerous mistake.
Clicking on any embedded links in spam messages helps spammers determine ‘live' email accounts, which means more spam. What's worse, users can pick viruses, Trojans or other malicious code--just by clicking on embedded links. It may cause various problems, including loss of confidential information--identity theft, and loss of money from bank accounts as a result.

Users shouldn't forget about such threat as phishing. Not long ago, on February. 15, 2005, it was the Radicati Group that pointed out --fraud and phishing types of email are one of the fastest growing segments of spam. In the first quarter of 2005 the Radicati Group expects fraudulent emails to reach 8% of all spam.

Blunder 2 -- trying to unsubscribe to spam using the ‘unsubscribe' link in the email -- 18% of respondents
Some users are naive enough to think that spammers really won't send any junk mail to their addresses if they tell them not to. Haven't they heard that spammers use the unsubscribe link solely to identify active email accounts. When individual email addresses or entire domains are found to be active, they are doomed to flood of spam.

Blunder 3 -- What's more: Over 10% of respondents have purchased products advertised in spam. Sending out huge volumes of spam is very cheap, so let's face it--spam is an effective means of advertising. Spam is booming, and these 10% users who actually bought anything advertised by spam, are partly to blame for it.

The consequences can be very serious when such a user is at work. Online criminals find more and more ways of stealing valuable information, some of these techniques include spam. Spam filters won't solve the whole problem; much still depends on end users. Marcel Nienhuis, analyst from the Radicati Group, was absolutely right when said " no technology in the world can protect an organisation if users exercise bad email behaviour."
On March 23, 2005 Mirapoint and the Radicati Group, a consulting and market research firm, released preliminary results of their end-user survey on email hygiene. "This preliminary data is surprising and somewhat shocking to us," said Marcel Nienhuis, market analyst at the Radicati Group.
The survey shows that some end users haven't learned the lesson and still make the same blunders.

Blunder 1 -- clicking on embedded links within spam (not including the unsubscribe link) -- 31% of respondents have done it at least once. The most dangerous mistake.
Clicking on any embedded links in spam messages helps spammers determine ‘live' email accounts, which means more spam. What's worse, users can pick viruses, Trojans or other malicious code--just by clicking on embedded links. It may cause various problems, including loss of confidential information--identity theft, and loss of money from bank accounts as a result.

Users shouldn't forget about such threat as phishing. Not long ago, on February. 15, 2005, it was the Radicati Group that pointed out --fraud and phishing types of email are one of the fastest growing segments of spam. In the first quarter of 2005 the Radicati Group expects fraudulent emails to reach 8% of all spam.

Blunder 2 -- trying to unsubscribe to spam using the ‘unsubscribe' link in the email -- 18% of respondents
Some users are naive enough to think that spammers really won't send any junk mail to their addresses if they tell them not to. Haven't they heard that spammers use the unsubscribe link solely to identify active email accounts. When individual email addresses or entire domains are found to be active, they are doomed to flood of spam.

Blunder 3 -- What's more: Over 10% of respondents have purchased products advertised in spam. Sending out huge volumes of spam is very cheap, so let's face it--spam is an effective means of advertising. Spam is booming, and these 10% users who actually bought anything advertised by spam, are partly to blame for it.

The consequences can be very serious when such a user is at work. Online criminals find more and more ways of stealing valuable information, some of these techniques include spam. Spam filters won't solve the whole problem; much still depends on end users. Marcel Nienhuis, analyst from the Radicati Group, was absolutely right when said " no technology in the world can protect an organisation if users exercise bad email behaviour."


Alexandra Gamanenko currently works at Raytown Corporation, LLC—an independent software developing company. This company provides software capable of disabling information-stealing modules, which can be hidden inside spyware as well as viruses, worms and Trojans.
Learn more -- visit the company's website
www.anti-keyloggers.com

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Tuesday, May 6, 2008

The Inadvertent Spammer

The Inadvertent Spammer
The Internet and email are still in their youth, and continue to develop before our eyes; along with that some of the rules of the game evolve as well. One rule you dont want to break is are those that apply to Spam. [see my article Spam An Emotional Issue]
Whether you are an intentional spammer or an inadvertent one is not that relevant. The perception of being a spammer has the same effect as actually being guilty.
How does one inadvertently spam people? Not having their direct permission to send them email sounds straightforward right? Not exactly.
When you meet someone at a networking event, and they hand you their business card, is that permission? Yes and no. It is permission to send them a personal follow up note. It is NOT permission to ad them to your ezine list or to your promotional mailing list. It is permission to send them an invite to be added to your list.
Another example is that of email addresses collected on a website in exchange for the download of a free book or report. The form gives you no indication of what they will do with your email address. It doesnt ask your permission; it doesnt give you a chance to select your preferences. By merely accepting the free report, have you given permission to receive emails and promotions from the site owner? No, you havent.
Renting an email list and using an email service provider to send out your email, if not done properly, will have you perceived as a spammer. If it is not clear to the recipient who is sending the message, and how they got their name, your campaign is in question, even it is was legitimately sent from an opt in list. The key is the relationship the list owner has with the recipients, as well as the clarity of the message. Is this is well maintained opt in list? Did people know what kind of messages they were opting in to receive? If both answers are yes, and the emails are clearly branded from both the list owner and their partner, the campaign will succeed.
Sending out an email communication to a number of people without using the BCC function is almost inadvertent spamming. By not hiding your recipients email addresses, you have laid them vulnerable to collection and use by an actual spammer, or to a novice emailer who utilizes the reply all function, inadvertently spamming your entire list. You are then guilty by association.

Here are the top 8 tips to help you maintain a good email reputation

Have a clear and visible email and privacy policy
When asking for email addresses let people know what you
intend to do with them
When sending email, make sure your brand is clear and
recognizable to recipients
Make sure the name in the Sender line is recognizable
[johnsmith@amazon.com may not be as recognizable as
Customerservice@amazon.com]
When using a third party provider to send out emails to a
list, make sure that your relationship with the actual
sender is explained
Be aware of words that trigger spam filters, and avoid them
See list:
http://www.wilsonweb.com/wmt8/spamfilter_phrases.htm
Check your outgoing email here:
http://ezinecheck.com/check.html
Make it easy to unsubscribe or change preferences

To your effective emailing ~ Jane

Stay tuned for the release of my book:
Are You Sending The Right Message -
Effective Email Communication for Executives and Entrepreneurs.

Reprint Permission
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Reprint permission granted in part or whole when the following credit appears:
"Reprinted with permission from Jane Tabachnick eMarketing (Copyright, 2003, Jane Tabachnick)

If you would like more great articles like this, subscribe to our complimentary newsletter, the eMarketing Edge at http://www.janetabachnick.com/ezine.html"

 

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Monday, May 5, 2008

SPAM: Open the Can Carefully

In the past several years, the word Spam has changed its common meaning. Until the mid nineties, the word spam was a household name referring to a mystery canned meat from a company called Hormel. It was epitomized in a Monty Python skit known as The SPAM Skit. They managed to say the word SPAM more than a hundred times in two-and-a-half minutes.

Nerds being nerds (name someone you know who youd consider a computer geek who DOESNT know any piece of Monty Python word-for-word), the name soon gained a new meaning. As unwanted newsgroup postings on the Usenet grew, they began to be called SPAM for their repetitiveness. Eventually this came to be a catch-all phrase for any unwanted communication through a computer.

Now the word is still a household name, but has a completely new meaning. Meat in a can has nothing to do with what we label SPAM today. Generally the term is in reference to unwanted commercial email. UCE (Unsolicited Commercial Email) is the proper term for what most people term to be SPAM.

Whatever you call it, you probably hate it. In several polls (both official and amateur), Spam has been listed as the number one annoyance to users on the Internet. It is talked about more and more often as even the politicians have begun to do something about it. The trouble is no one is REALLY doing much to stop it on a grand scale.

There are many steps in the right direction, however. For now, lets talk about how someone, like you, puts themselves in a position to receive Spam. Then well discuss how you can avoid or get rid of it.

Getting On the SPAMmers List
There are three common ways that email addresses get put on the SPAMmers list.

1 - Spiders & Robots: The most common way to get listed is to post your address on a website, forum, chat room, or public profile (such as MSN, ICQ, About.com, etc.). These addresses are easily gathered by programs called spiders or robots. These programs simply troll the Web looking for email addresses to ad to the SPAMmers list.

2 - Nefarious Opt-In Scams: The next most common way to get your address listed is to give it to a questionable business on the Internet (usually with all good intentions). That business may then turn around and sell it to someone else as a part of a list.

3 - Random Address Generation: This is another tactic employed by SPAMmers and its just what its name implies. A piece of software generates random addresses using commonly-known domains (hotmail.com, msn.com, earthlink.net, etc.).

Once your name is on a list with one SPAMmer, it will soon make its way to more. Most of those who build these lists are in the business of selling these lists as well. Not many SPAMmers build their own lists anymore unless theyre very small-time or have a specific way of gathering these lists that makes it very easy. Youd be surprised at how much time it takes to actually generate a sizeable list of email addresses excepting the random generation method. To get a good list of email addresses a list that is fairly low on bad addresses takes time and considerable computing power. This is why most harvesters (as theyre commonly called) are not SPAMmers themselves.

These lists are sold to anyone who will pay the money to obtain them. As the sending of UCE has become more and more competitive, these lists have become more and more targeted towards specific industries. Some lists are great for eBay users, some are great for get-rich-quick schemes, some are better for medical markets.

Staying Off The SPAMmers List
If you spend any amount of time surfing the Web especially if you use chat rooms, forums, or other publicly-displayed message areas you need to get a disposable email address. These are widely available for free from places like Hotmail.com, Yahoo.com, and any number of smaller destinations on the Web. If a chat room or user group requires that you post a public address in your profile, use that disposable address. If you post in the UseNet or other groups, set up an email address with your ISP specifically for that posting.

Before giving your real email address to ANYONE, make sure you know who they are. Friends and family are obvious, but what about that business youre giving an address to? How about that eBay seller? Know who they are and whether you can trust them before you give that email address to them. Check if they have an anti-SPAM policy or privacy policy listed and read what it says.

Getting Rid of SPAM You Already Receive
Most email clients, such as Outlook Express, include filtering systems that you can employ to block, trash, or otherwise deal with questionable emails. I have filters that take any email with three or more ! marks (!!!) in the subject and put it in a Crap folder. Another filter puts anything with MLM, FFA, or Network Marketing into the same folder. A third has a list of known SPAM addresses that are automatically dumped into the SPAMforSpamCop folder. After going through the Crap folder and scanning the subjects to be sure there arent any legitimate emails in there, I then move all of those to the SPAMforSpamCop folder as well. That entire folder is then packaged up and sent to SpamCop.net for dissection. If you need more information on SpamCop.net, please refer to my article Reporting Spam to SpamCop.net on my website. You can read that article here:
http://aww.aaronzwebworkz.com/resources/newsletter/articles.shtml?spamcop

If you havent already done so, set up at least one more (I use several) email address. If you sign up for a lot of one-time mailings (eBooks, articles, etc.), consider using a service like SpamGourmet (http://www.spamgourmet.com). You can sign up for temporary email addresses that will work only the specified number of times before deactivating. I use them for one-time mailings or, say, a five-part series mailing. Then, if they send anything more, it will reject it and Ill never have to deal with it.

Your main email address should not be easy to guess. A good test for this is to call someone who doesnt know your email and ask them what they think your email address probably is. If they cant guess your username in the first few tries, youve got a good one. If they can, you need to reconsider it or do something to change that.

Attacking the SPAMmer

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Monday, March 31, 2008

Search Engines and Spam

What is Spam?

Spam (for Search Engines) refers to the use of any illegal technique to improve a page' ranking in the Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs). Who decides what 's illegal? The SEs, who else?

Tons of articles have been written about search engines and spam. Why the need for another article? Because, believe it or not, at the end of 2001 MOST of the major search engines are still vulnerable to MANY unethical techniques used by malicious Webmasters.

Spam has been known for a long time. For years, Webmasters tried to cheat the search engines. Today, many SEs say they know all the tricks and penalize those pages. As you will see, most SEs only SAY that they will punish spammers, but in fact they DON'T.

What is Search Engine Optimization?

Search Engine Optimization, Placement, Positioning, Ranking, or whatever you want to call it, is the process of designing a Web page that can be easily indexed by the SEs and receive high rankings in the SERPs.

My Experience with Search Engines

Recently, using some major U.S. SEs, I made a search for a Web design company in New York. Let me to share with you my highly disappointing experience.

The search engine results pages (SERPs) in most of the search engines were full of Web pages that used one or more spamming techniques. The most frequently encountered illegal strategies used by many SEs were:

Keyword stuffing
Page redirect
Mirror domains

Keyword Stuffing

Keyword stuffing is the adding of many relevant, sometimes irrelevant, words in the:

Keywords META tag

One of the criteria some search engines use to rank pages in the results list is the presence of relevant words in the Keywords META tag. From use to abuse is a little step, so some webmasters place many words, repeating them many times in the hope that the page will rank higher. The record was a page that had 1,150 words (no mistake, WORDS not characters) in the Keyword Meta tag. The word "design" was repeated 209 times. Unbelievable, right?
What are Search Engines' positions regarding this spamming technique? One of the Web's most important Search Engine, in their submission guidelines, states that it will "exclude submissions" with "excessive keywords". It looks like 1,150 words are not "excessive" enough, because THAT SE and many others index the page.

Besides stuffing words in the Keywords META tags, some Webmasters also add lots of words in the:

Visible page

Another criteria some search engines rank sites in the results list is the so-called "word frequency": the more times a word is repeated in the content of a page, the higher are the chances it will be near the top in the results list.

Some Webmasters often abuse these criteria by placing words or phrases- most of the times- at the bottom of the page, many, MANY times. Do you recall the site that has 1,150 words in the Keywords Meta tags? Well, the same site just "copied and pasted" those words in the copy of the page.

You might think that it's weird to see a bunch of words inserted in the page. Well, Webmasters have found two methods to work around this problem: "tiny text" and "hidden- or invisible- text". "Tiny text" means that the Webmaster places the text in a very small size, most of the time hardly legible. "Invisible text" means the use of the same color for text AND for background, so users will NOT see the words but SE's spider WILL see, so the page will rank higher that it deserves.

The Search Engines' position regarding this spamming technique? One of the Web's most important Search Engine, in its guidelines writes: "We must sometimes exclude submissions" of "pages with text that is not easily read, either because it is too small or is obscured by the background of the page". Another SE's will "significantly downgrade a page's ranking" ... "if words cannot be read due to their small size or color".

Despite these statements, both SEs, as well as other SEs, index pages with text in the same color as the background. To illustrate the total lack of respect for users with little fear for SEs, one Web page has a whopping 936 words in BLACK text on a WHITE background. Incredible!

Page Redirect

One page can be redirected either by using the "refresh" META tag or using cloaking techniques. Why the need to redirect a page? One of the legitimate reasons to redirect a page is having a new URL for the site. But some Webmasters abuse page redirection to obtain higher rankings for their pages.

How does it works?

Using the "refresh" META tag:

This technique consists in building 2 pages: one, highly "optimized" - read "spammed"- with many, MANY words in the KW and Description META tag and also in the Title tag. Most of the time the copy of the page is also highly "optimized" with KW stuffing- many times with invisible text.

These pages called: "Doorways Pages", "Gateway", "Entry" or "Bridge" pages most of the time display a "Click here to enter the site" or simply "Enter" or sometimes "select Flash or HTML" message on the entire page. Using the "refresh" META tag the Webmaster will "redirect" the user to a second page, which will appear after a determined number of seconds after seeing the first page. If the time is set to "0" (zero) seconds, the viewer will NOT see the first page, but directly the second one.

Why two pages? The first one shown to SEs as highly "optimized" will help the page rank very high in the SERPSs, by cheating the SEs. The second one is "nicer", not too much spam, a good page for viewers.

Cloaking technique is probably the most controversial spamming technique.

It also uses 2 pages, one for the SE and another for the viewer. The big difference between this technique and the one above is that in the first case it is possible to see the code of the first page (shown to SEs), but in the second case it is not.

Hiding the Meta data (especially keywords) in the code can provide a huge advantage in this current highly competitive market, as there are known cases of Webmasters that stole a competitor's keywords in an attempt to rank higher.

What are search engines' positions regarding redirecting? Do not submit any site with an address that redirects to another address" or "Your site cannot mirror or redirect to another Web site" or we "may permanently ban from our index any sites or authors who engage in cloaking to distort their search rankings" or simply: "Don't cloak".

Pretty clear, right? Then why some Webmasters insist in using cloaking techniques? To hide their pages' code from prying eyes. Bad guys are not afraid to spam- most of the time, SEs only SAY: "don't do that". If you do, there will be NO- or sometimes very little- punishment.

Mirror domains

Consists in building hundreds or even thousands of pages with SAME content but with altogether DIFFERENT URLs (Web addresses). The advantage is clear: by finding the "right" tricks to cheat the SE algorithm one can "dominate" the SERPSs with pages one after another. One company had 62 pages in the Top 100 results list.

What are the search engines positions regarding this spamming technique? "Do not submit mirror sites". "Your site cannot mirror or redirect to another Web site". "Do not submit" . . . "the same pages from multiple domains". But in practice most of the SEs are vulnerable to this technique.

Questions for:

Search Engines

When are you going to be SERIOUS about your job?

When will you PUNISH the spammers? Have CLEAN indexes? It is not difficult. A dialog with the Webmasters community might result in opinions such as THIS ( http://www.webmasterworld.com/forum5/830.htm ) one:

"I can't understand why the search engines aren't professional enough to put their anti-spam efforts into a detailed agreement and have anyone that wants to be listed sign their agreement. Such an agreement would spell out very clearly what is and what isn't allowed. Anyone breaking the rules would be subject to specific penalties or banning, but would be notified and have a chance to fix the problem especially if the infraction was not too serious".

Clear enough?

Why do you accept advertising from sites which use spamming techniques? So, if a page cannot achieve high rankings, for few buck it becomes "featured" site or listing and voil!, on the top of the list. Is this the latest trick for a poor site to be listed high? Now, on one hand, in your guidelines you tell Webmasters not to spam, on the other hand, if a spammer PAYS, that's no problem. Good bye relevancy, hello profits! Here is a comment by a high-ranking official from a major SE: "the more we take payment for listings, the more you'll get great results" Excuse me? "Big" pockets' sites are NOT always more relevant than "poor" pockets' sites.

I know I'm not the first ( http://www.commercialalert.org/releases/searchenginerel.html ) one to ask but, when are you going to make a CLEAR distinction between paid listings and real results? The user needs to make an informed decision. The user needs to be helped, not confused.

Webmasters

Why use techniques seen by the SEs as spam? Why take the risk of having pages penalized, or even permanently banned, from indexes? Two months of glory, then a new domain, blacklisted again- poor way to market any business.

Think it's impossible to get higher rankings WITHOUT using spam? My answer is NO. Do your homework, read thoroughly and abide to SEs guidelines, cross your fingers and you'll be # 1.

Have you ever seen one of your page's ranking lower than a page which uses spamming techniques? I bet you did. Now, how did you react? Did you report it to the SE or you said "nah, that's no use anyway"? Or perhaps you thought it's not nice to turn in the Webmaster. OK, let me ask you something: would you like, that while waiting in line to buy a ticket to a movie, somebody, who comes AFTER you, go in the front and buy a ticket BEFORE you do?

Or perhaps THIS ( http://www.globalserve.net/~iwb/search_engine/spamdex.html ) is the solution?

A site will be nominated and posted on a listserv which any member can second then the offender will be notified of his conviction by the spamdex police. They will have a week to clean it up and re-submit and remove the offending listing from the search engines. After a week the offender will be reported to the search engines. The search engines will have a month to act or they will be added to the list as an accomplice to the activity.

Huh? What do you think?

Site Owners

When are you going to wake up? What am I talking about? Well, I'm taking about a report, which says, "nearly 46 percent of the marketers surveyed said they allocate less than 0.5 percent of their annual marketing budgets on search engine optimization (SEO) services". Now, read it again, and again.

So, you spend 95,5 % on gizmos such as Flash and Java Scripts and less than 1% for SEO. Let me tell you something: bells and whistles will never help a page rank high in SERPs. NEVER. I fact it will work against.

Which are your rankings, by the way? When was the last time you checked, if ever? Are you in the Top 30 results for your strategic keywords when the user runs a search? You're not? Practically you don't exist for your prospects. Still wonder why so many .com CLOSE? Are you going to be next?

Do you need a Ph.D. to realize that the SEO- your Web site "salesman"- is more necessary than ever? One of these days you'll discover the power of search engine marketing: the cheapest yet most effective way to promote your site to more than 300 million prospects. Bright future for SEO.
I can see a bright future for the SEO, don't you?

When are you going to understand that SEOs is NOT only optimizing the Keyword Meta Tag? SEO is a highly specialized, time-consuming and sometimes expensive but absolutely NECESSARY task. It's both an art and a science to position a Web page near the top in SERPs. So, forget about your in-house SEO "expert", shop around and find a reputable SEO firm or consultant.

Dos and don'ts when you talk to the SEO guy:

If a Web Marketer suggest you to get rid of that flashy or framed Home Page, just DO IT! Or, don't blame HIM for the consequences. If a SEO says something about cloaking and doorways, run, and I mean it.
Don't even think telling a SEOs, that you'll pay him, AFTER the pages show up in the search engines. Enough said. Don't be a kid by asking him to GUARANTEE you Top 10 positions! No honest SEO will do it. The only think a SEO can guarantee is an increase of the number of pages indexed and an increase of the current rankings. With some luck your sales will sky rocket.

Last thing: please, avoid those submission tools and their hype: "submit your site to 500,000 SEs for $24.95". Submit your Web site by hand. Period.

IN CONCLUSION:

Since the summer of 1995, when I worked for the first time with a Search Engine, I saw some SEs disappearing, and lots of new SEs appearing.

Competition is good, but users might be confused with thousands of SEs. Besides, not everybody knows sophisticated searching techniques such as the Boolean operators, so there is a lot of frustration out there. If we add the irrelevancy of the results in most of the SEs, we have a pretty sad picture.

A clean index should be the main priority for any search Engine. If a SE gives irrelevant results, the user will switch to another SE. Can a SE afford loosing users in the todays' fierce competition between SEs? I don't think so.

To wrap up, I am not saying here that ALL the Search Engines are vulnerable to ALL the known spamming techniques. All I say is that MOST of the Search Engines are vulnerable to MOST of the bad tricks.

I also believe that is NOT important to list WHICH SEs are vulnerable to WHICH spamming techniques or WHICH sites spam WHICH SEs. The important thing is it STILL happens.

At not only in the American SEs. I've checked also Spanish, German, French and Italian SEs. Less spam, but still there.

From now on, monthly I'll make an update of this article. I can only hope that one day I can say "everything is fine". Be back!

Daniel Bazac is the Web Marketer for Web Design in New York, a design, redesign and promotion company. He's specializing in Search Engine Optimization (SEO). He's been online from 1995 and he's also a professional Internet Information Researcher. You may contact Daniel Bazac at mailto:danielbazac@hotmail.com or visit his Web site: http://www.web-design-in-new-york.com/

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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Spamming The Internet ...

Debbie Solomon

When you hear the word SPAM, what comes to your mind? Is the term worse then the meaning? This word SPAM has been blown out of proportion. It is causing unbelievable hysteria on the internet.

Many businesses are spending more and more time each day getting frustrated, yelling at the spammers, and reporting the spammers.
-Is it really worth it?
-Is there a way OUT?

Unfortunately we will never get rid of spam. It is like getting rid of the junk mail in your mailbox. It is always there. You can bank on it almost everyday. It is the same way with SPAM. As long as you have any kind of existence online, your email box will be littered with SPAM.

There is a way to cut a lot of it out though. Ever since I got my new email server, I have had very little spam in my email box. Sure I get one or two a day, but it is not like it used to be.

So, HOW do we get rid of SO MUCH spam mail?

The BIGGEST CULPRIT of Spam is FFA LINK pages. Now, I know many people feel that since they agreed to receive this junk mail in exchange for placing their link that it is not spam. Well, SPAM is basically unwanted EMAIL. Do you WANT to receive all these emails?

Many business who host an FFA LINK page do it for one reason and one reason only - FOR YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS! I am not saying ALL FFA Link pages do this, but MOST of them do. If you submit to FFA LINK pages, you can be guaranteed at least 100 emails a day. And then all the follow-up emails after that, so it is never-ending. You will be automatically subscribed to ezines and newsletters, which you never personally subscribed to. But somewhere on the FFA page in real small writing is your agreement. In fact, a lot of these newsletters even put on top of their publication that you have agreed to receive this newsletter by subscribing, corresponding with them, or placing your LINK on their FFA page.

Of course the owners of FFA Pages will not agree with me. But, if you want complete honesty- -you will not increase traffic to your site. -you will not reach thousands and millions of people to view your ad. -you will not even be able to keep your link there for more than one day.
(and that is good for FFA pages. Normally you are off within hours).

-So WHY post to FFA sites when you are off of them in hours or a day? -So WHY post to FFA sites when your email box is flooded with Emails? -So WHY post to FFA sites to gain exposure when all you get is hundreds of emails selling their product?

-Don't you want people to read about YOUR product? -Don't you want people to see YOUR link? -Don't you want people emailing you about YOUR product?

FFA LINK pages do you more harm than good. The time and energy you spend at posting to these links, could be time and energy spent on doing something productive for your business. These pages are there only to get your email address. Many of these pages have members who pay to get your email address and spam you. These are called, "Opt-In email Lists for SALE, or for RENT". That is where many of these companies get their addresses. Don't get me wrong, I am sure there are legit ones out there, but they are few and far between.

People who do post to FFA LINKS will never read all the junk mail in their in-box, they just delete it. So what is the point?
It is like a cat and mouse game that will never end. So, is that what you really want? Because it does not stop there. Your email address is added to spam databases, and posted to opt-in mailing lists (real "opt-in", huh?). NOW, your email address is a pawn for spammers. Every piece of software for harvesting email addresses will grab yours, and now your email address is for sale everywhere.

Do yourself a favor....
There are so many ways to do productive advertising. Stay away from FFA LINKS. You will make NO money, and you will be a VICTIM of constant SPAM. You will NEVER see a successful business entrepreneur posting to FFA Sites. Ask them where to advertise, they will tell you.

When I was a newbie, I submitted to every FFA link I could find. Gee, submitting your link to hundreds of thousands of possible clients? And for FREE? How could you go wrong? It was SO easy!

I would wake up the next morning with hundreds of emails in my box. In my opinion, YES< it is SPAM! Because I DO NOT WANT THEM! I posted to an FFA LINK page, that is all. I HAD to agree to receive some emails, but not HUNDREDS!!! That was the only way to get my link on the page! I was in for a rude awakening. Not one thread of business came through and I could not decipher what was JUNK MAIL, and what was business.

I literally had to get another email account. I do not touch FFA Pages, and I get an average of a few spam mails a day.
Everything else is business. I love it! I will never totally get rid of spam. In fact, now it is a pleasure, because I just reply with my AD. Anyone who does business online is guaranteed to receive some. But if you want to get rid of the hundreds of emails in your box, then STOP POSTING TO FFA Pages! They are, in fact, the biggest culprit of SPAM.

Most successful businesses have learned to stay away from FFA Pages. These practices are not part of a successful business. They are part of a desperate ploy to make money without spending any.

Now, not everyone will agree with what I am saying, however, the facts are in front of you. You decide whether you want to deal with all the junk mail. I, for one, can say that it is a pleasure doing business online, now that I do not have to wake up to hundreds of spammers.

You can save yourself a lot of headaches by NOT falling VICTIM to SPAMMERS!

Debbie is the Creator of The HomeSource Arena, which is The Leading Source in Certified Home Employment, and owner of The Online Exchange Ezine, a Top Rated, world renowned Ezine.
Please visit her site at: http://www.marketingtrendz.com editor@marketingtrendz.com

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Friday, February 8, 2008

Spam Not

"Spam not, lest ye be spammed." ~Mari Peckham

Just yesterday, I received over 40,000 emails from a person who had harvested a contact email address from one of my websites. The person may or may not have personally secured my email address, but since I use it only to receive email feedback from my website and never to send mail, I know that it was a harvested address. Because of the nature of my use of this email address, I also have a "Thank you for contacting us." autoresponder message in place there.

My server was mad at me. My entire system was mad at me. I couldn't conduct my normal business and send out email that needed to be sent out, because my computer was hard at work downloading email upon email.

How can something like this happen?

Simple enough, really. My email was picked up off of my website and added to an autoresponder. If it had been a regular email account, I would have received an unsolicited message that I would have easily deleted, no big deal. But since my email address was attached to an autoresponder, it started a vicious cycle of email autoresponse.

The person who had sent me the email - well, they ended up with 40,000 "Thank you for contacting us." emails in their box from me.

I'm sure that that wasn't very pleasant for them, either. And the fact of the matter is that they may have not even realized that they had done anything wrong.

Spam is bad. Not all spammers are bad people, though. Some of them are just misinformed or inexperienced Internet marketers.

I'm the first to admit that marketing can be frustrating. Just when you've hit the wall and can't think of another fresh marketing idea to get new people to your site, along comes a company that offers you a list of 100,000 email addresses for just $24.95 or some other unbelievable deal. Wow! What an opportunity! Affordable, even! It's hard not to jump all over an offer like that.

But beware! It's hard to say where those email addresses are coming from.

Many unscrupulous companies use "harvesting" software that spiders the Internet and lifts email address off of websites. They then compile lists of these email addresses and sell them as "opt-in safelists" for profit.

As a marketer, using these lists can get you in tons of trouble. Once labeled as a Spammer, it is hard to rid yourself of that reputation, whether you were spamming on purpose, or you were a victim of a bad "list". You can be dropped from your hosting service or ISP. Companies that you are promoting using Spam will cancel your accounts.

Bottom line: If you are not sure that it is NOT Spam, then don't do it. Develop your own list of opt-in subscribers by offering a newsletter, free information, or something else that will get people to take notice of you. Both YahooGroups (http://groups.yahoo.com/) and Topica (http://www.topica.com) offer free, easy-to-use service that will manage your subscribers for you. You can find other similar services on the Internet. This is one of the most responsive forms of advertising, because you have the opportunity to develop a relationship with your list members.

You can also use a mailing list building service, such as Free Mailer 2000 (http://www.freemailer2000.com), although you will need to advertise your mailing list builder site in order to build your mailing list.

Safelists can be another safe way to get the word out about your business, but vary in responsiveness. I recommend the services of SafeListBoys (http://www.safelistboys.com) to help you find lists and easily manage your safelist activity for a small monthly fee. You can also find new safelists by entering "safelists" in any search engine, but watch out for those "BULK" mailing list services that may fall in the unscrupulous SPAM category. Rule of thumb, if you aren't a member yourself and know for a fact that the list is opt-in, don't use it!

If you are choosing to spam, stop immediately. It may be getting you a handful of responses right now, but the painful consequences of your actions can cancel out any benefits that you may find.

If we, as an Internet marketing community, would all agree to market responsibly, the Internet would soon be a better place to work and live. What comes around goes around. Spam not, lest ye be spammed.

Mari is the author of MarketingPitbull, a truly step-by-step guide to creating exponential traffic flow and a residual income online, with or without your own product. Find out more about MarketingPitbull at: http://www.marketingpitbull.com

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Thursday, January 31, 2008

The Misconceptions of Spam Filters

Unfortunately there are a lot of people online that all have many misconceptions regarding Spam Filters. Today I'm going to answer some questions that people have asked me about my "Spam column" for DEMC Small Business Ezine regarding them. With regards to spam filters, one can never have enough knowledge, so I do hope that this article will clear up any misconceptions that you may have.

1. Don't spam filters ONLY apply to those who have NOT opted in?

This is indeed a very sad misconception, Spam Filters do affect EVERYONE who sends and receives email in some way or another. Whether you publish a FREE ezine OR a PAID ezine, it does not matter, if it is being sent by email it affects YOU. The biggest problem with filters is that they have NO way to detect that the email message is in fact "Optin", they actually base it on your headers.

Should you use a third party list server, your chances of being filtered are even greater, because of that reason. And this is how ALL filtering is based: By looking at the headers in your email message, by using a point system based on the contents in your subject line as well as the body.

This can also be done by subscribing to a blacklist service that will provide them with a list of domains or hosts that have been identified as being used by spammers -such as http://www.spamhaus.org or http://mail-abuse.org/ AOL, Verizon and Accessus are widely known for using services such as these. It should also be known that spam filtering programs MAY also subscribe to these services, some do and some do not.

2. I heard that spam filters don't apply to autoresponders, is this true?

Actually they do, because if you send email using a third party list server, and put your FROM email address in the field rather than a FROM address on the third party's list server - the spam filter will read it as being a "falsified" email address or header. Because REAL spammers do it all of the time.

3. Spam Filters do not target HTML ezines because they can't read the code properly, is this true?

Yes in fact they do, some more so than text ezines, this is because HTML ezines are considered to be more virus prone. And NOT all list servers and email clients "clean" their email before it is sent. Meaning, even if you do not have a virus on your computer, your ezine can still pick one up during the process of sending through your list server. This has been known to happen on "high traffic" list servers as well as FREE list servers, such as Yahoo Groups.

3. Aren't spam filters ONLY used by large ISP's?

Although it is very true that the majority of larger ISP's use Spam Filters (such as: AOL, Yahoo, Hotmail, Mindspring, Verizon, Accessus, Sympatico etc.) you will find a lot of smaller ISP's use them as well. For instance, my ISP has only 900 customers and they do use them, although I've made it quite clear they are unacceptable on my account. The most "popular program' that ISP's use is called Spam Assassin.

I hope this article has cleared up any misconceptions that you may have had regarding Spam Filters. You can learn more detailed information about Spam filters by visiting: http://spamassassin.org/tests.html

Laurie Rogers is co-author of the Ezine Resource Guide, you can check it out at: http://www.zineadz.com/erg.html She is the owner of Optin Frenzy a list building program for ezine publishers http://www.optinfrenzy.com You can also obtain Laurie's articles at: mailto:ezinearticles@optinfrenzy.com

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