Damned Spamers
Jun. 4th, 2002 09:41 pmGrrr.
Anyone else been getting spam or bounces of spam that was forged to look like it came from your personal email address?
I've got a pile of bounces of Make $ex Fast spam with my address forged on it; from headers looks like from or via rain.fr
Any thoughts about this going beyond annoying into the illegal territory of identity theft?
Anyone else been getting spam or bounces of spam that was forged to look like it came from your personal email address?
I've got a pile of bounces of Make $ex Fast spam with my address forged on it; from headers looks like from or via rain.fr
Any thoughts about this going beyond annoying into the illegal territory of identity theft?
no subject
Date: 2002-06-05 07:25 am (UTC)Unfortunately, I think the best way to avoid spam in your in-box is to abandoned compromised accounts and start new ones, and then be VERY careful about who you give the address out to. It also helps to go with a reliable, but not well-known provider. I've been using www.myrealbox.com for a few months now and have been very happy. I have had one account there for over a year (during which time it was mostly inactive) and it has yet to receive its first spam message.
The only other option to avoid getting spam is to hold your own domain and manage your own email server. Then, each time you deal with a company, you create a new address *just* for dealing with that company. That way, if they sell you out, you know who not to do business with, and then you just remove that account and the spammers can no longer hit you there.
For example, say you register the domain infrogmation.com Your "true" account might be "froggy@infrogmation.com" but you'd never give that one out except to close friends. But when doing business with amazon.com, you'd create an email account called amazon.com@infrogmation.com. Then if amazon.com@infrogmation.com starts getting a lot of spam, you know that amazon are slimeballs and you quit dealing with them and delete the account, and all the spams headed for that account bounce back.
The only thing is that it's a bit of a pain to manage your own email server, and it's probably not something you'd want to do unless you're already a sysadmin, or a big DIY geek.