Inbox innundated with spam......

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Guest

Not too long ago I started receiving a lot of spam in my inbox. Usually just
advertisements for prescription drugs or online college degrees. I use
incredimail and want to know of a good way to block spam without having to
subscribe yearly to Incredimail to use their version. Any suggestions?
 
bassyorky said:
Not too long ago I started receiving a lot of spam in my inbox. Usually just
advertisements for prescription drugs or online college degrees. I use
incredimail and want to know of a good way to block spam without having to
subscribe yearly to Incredimail to use their version. Any suggestions?

Check out your ISP - many of them offer free spam
filters. You should also check the Incredimail FAQs.
 
SPAMPAL does it for me. Look it up in GOOGLE. I divert spam to a created
extra folder called SPAM & then quickly double check before deletion. Only
mistake is usually an Ebay receipt.
 
bassyorky said:
Not too long ago I started receiving a lot of spam in my inbox. Usually just
advertisements for prescription drugs or online college degrees. I use
incredimail and want to know of a good way to block spam without having to
subscribe yearly to Incredimail to use their version. Any suggestions?


While it's not possible to completely eliminate spam (unsolicited
commercial email), there are some precautions and steps you can take to
minimize it's impact:

1) Never, ever post your real email address to publicly accessible
forums or newsgroups, such as this one. For years now, spammers have
been using software utilities to scan such places to harvest email
addresses. It's a simple matter to disguise your posted email address
so that these software "bots" can't obtain anything useful. For
example, insert some obviously bogus characters or words into your reply
address, for example: "(e-mail address removed)."

2) Never, ever reply to any spam you receive, even to "unsubscribe" or
"remove" yourself from the spammers' address lists; you'll only compound
the problem. If spammers had any intention of honoring the your desire
not to receive spam, they wouldn't have become spammers in the first
place. When you reply to a spammer, all you're doing is confirming that
he/she has a valid, marketable email address.

3) Be especially leery of any offers from websites for free software,
services, information, etc, that require your email address, or that
require your email address so you can "login" to access the offered
service and/or information. Many such sites are supplementing their
income by collecting addresses to sell to the spammers. For instance,
subscribing to CNN.COM's Breaking News Service will garner you a lot of
additional spam. (Of course, not all such sites have under-handed
motives; it's a judgment call. If the offer seems "too good to be
true," it's most likely a scam.)

4) DO forward any and all spam, with complete headers, to the
originating ISP with a complaint. Not all ISPs will make an effort to
shut down the spammers, but many will. One tool that makes forwarding
such complaints fairly simple is SpamCop (http://spamcop.net).

4) Another useful tool is MailWasher (http://www.mailwasher.net). This
utility allows you to preview your email before downloading it from the
server. Spammers can even be blacklisted, so that any future emails
from them will be automatically deleted from the server.

5) Within Outlook Express or whatever other email client application
you use, add any spammers to your Blocked Senders list, so the their
messages are automatically deleted from the server without being
downloaded to your PC.



--

Bruce Chambers

Help us help you:



You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having
both at once. - RAH
 
bassyorky said:
Not too long ago I started receiving a lot of spam in my inbox. Usually
just
advertisements for prescription drugs or online college degrees. I use
incredimail and want to know of a good way to block spam without having to
subscribe yearly to Incredimail to use their version. Any suggestions?


http://www.SpamPal.org
 
Not too long ago I started receiving a lot of spam in my inbox. Usually just
advertisements for prescription drugs or online college degrees. I use
incredimail and want to know of a good way to block spam without having to
subscribe yearly to Incredimail to use their version. Any suggestions?

Mailwasher is my answer, it reads the e mail subjects and a bit of
text on the server then gives you the option to blacklist, bounce or
delete spam. The spam gets deleted directly from the server and does
not get dowloaded to your in box therefore you only have to download
the mail you want, the rest is gone.

http://www.firetrust.com/firetrustpro.html

Jonah
 
The best filter is the human reading the "from", "subject", and "contents".
Mailwasher and Mailwasher Pro let's you do that in one screen. And after
you filter and delete the spam at the mail server, only what you've left is
available for download for the email program on your PC.
You, the filter, can easily detect the nonsense spam of irrational sentences
whose only purpose is to get past your email program filters.
Another "trick" of spammers is using either older "sent" dates, or no "sent"
date at all. So, check the "sent" date as well when self filtering.
 
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