Spam
E-mail that is received but not wanted. Many people get very little spam and do not realise how fortunate they are. They probably have an email account with Sympatico, Cogeco, Rogers, Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail or other large ISP. These companies go to a lot of trouble to minimize spam for their customers.
If you use Hosting by Cobourg Internet, then you will automatically get "Mail Scanner" which does a reasonable job of eliminating Spam. The hard part of course is recognizing border line Spam. Mail Scanner flags "in between" emails with {Spam} in the subject so it can be looked at by the recipient. See below for some of the Spam identification techniques used. However, not all spam gets stopped and some wanted mail never makes it through.
If you still get spam, there are some things you can do.
SPAM Prevention techniques
SPAM Management techniques
Option 1
Use the SPAM management tools in your e-mail program. These
vary considerably but the following can be used for Outlook
Express 6. Others will be similar.
Select Tools>Message Rules>Mail… to set up a Mail “Message Rule”.
Here are instructions to set up a typical example:
- Select the Conditions…, select “Where the Message Body Contains Specific Words”
- Select the actions…, select “Move it to the Specified Folder”
- Rule Description, click contains specific words and under “Type specific words…” type (e.g.) Viagra and click Add then OK. Now click specified and click (if this is the first time you are doing this) New Folder – then type Spam to name the folder. If this is not the first time, select Spam. Then click OK.
- Name of the rule, enter a name - e.g. Rule 1.
Now click OK. You have now created a single rule – if mail arrives with Viagra in the body of the message it will be moved to the Spam folder. You can then look at this folder occasionally to make sure one of your friends did not send an off-colour joke. Then delete all these Spam messages.
Option 2
Use another e-mail program that has better spam filtering.
Option 3
Use a SPAM filtering service. Note that the risk is that you'll
either get Spam still or you'll miss clean mail or you'll
have to sort mail in a "Junk-mail-box". Some examples:
Hoaxes
If you have e-mail, sooner or later you will get a message
that says something like:
"Believe it or not, there is a new Virus that cannot be stopped by Norton. It is really bad, it wipes out your hard drive."
It will often include a reference from Bill Gates, Microsoft or some credible sounding person or company who has issued a warning. It will then tell you what you have to do to "fix" the problem. These fixes are sometimes benign and sometimes cause damage of their own. The hoax message will nearly always beseech you to pass the message on to everyone you know. These kinds of messages are nearly all hoaxes. (I've seen many and there have been no real ones yet!)
There are other hoaxes that purport to let you know about a health problem that you just have to know from an important sounding doctor. These sometimes contain some truth but other "facts" are just plain wrong.
The hoaxes cause little harm except clogging up the e-mail system. But it is embarrassing when you find out after you've forwarded a hoax to everyone! To see more on hoaxes, either now or next time you get an e-mail that's probably a hoax, click here. Hoaxes are also usually listed at Symantec (and other security companies). Go to their Security Response page. At the top is a search box. Enter some identifying text from the suspected e-mail (e.g. FREE M & M's) and click "Search". If it is a hoax, the response will confirm that and give details.
Hoaxes can often be half-true or sent willingly by people - e.g. "Stop the tax on e-mail with Bill 602P" which was never proposed but discussed at length on the Internet since 1999. For more on these kinds of sites, see Urban Legend. They also cover stories that may be true but seem unlikely.
Another form of Hoax that is more dangerous (financially) is Phishing. See security page.
A full analysis of spam fighting tecniques cannot be given here, becuase even if I knew all the tricks, it would be best not to make them public so spammers would know what was being used against them. But some are well known: