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Email Address Harvesting:
How Spammers Reap What You Sow
Is your in-box clogged with junk email messages
from people you don't know? Are you overwhelmed by unsolicited email offering
products or services you don't want?
It's no wonder. According to research by the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and several law enforcement partners, it's
harvest time for spammers. But, the consumer protection agency says, the good
news for computer users is that they can minimize the amount of spam they
receive.
According to the investigators, spammers
typically use computer programs that search public areas on the Internet to
compile, capture, or otherwise "harvest" lists of email addresses from web
pages, newsgroups, chat rooms, and other online destinations.
To find out which fields spammers consider most
fertile for harvesting, investigators "seeded" 175 different locations on the
Internet with 250 new, undercover email addresses. The locations included web
pages, newsgroups, chat rooms, message boards, and online directories for web
pages, instant message users, domain names, resumes, and dating services. During
the six weeks after the postings, the accounts received 3,349 spam emails. The
investigators found that:
- 86 percent of the addresses posted to web
pages received spam. It didn't matter where the addresses were posted on the
page: if the address had the "@" sign in it, it drew spam.
- 86 percent of the addresses posted to
newsgroups received spam.
- Chat rooms are virtual magnets for harvesting
software. One address posted in a chat room received spam nine minutes after
it first was used.
Addresses posted in other areas on the Internet
received less spam, the investigators found. Half the addresses posted on free
personal web page services received spam, as did 27 percent of addresses posted
to message boards and nine percent of addresses listed in email service
directories. Addresses posted in instant message service user profiles, "Whois"
domain name registries, online resume services, and online dating services did
not receive any spam during the six weeks of the investigation.
In almost all instances, the investigators found,
the spam received was not related to the address used. As a result, consumers
who use email are exposed to a variety of spam - including objectionable
messages - no matter the source of the address. Some email addresses posted to
children's newsgroups received a large amount of spam promoting adult web sites,
pitching work-at-home schemes, and even advertising hallucinogenic drugs.
Slowing the Email Harvest
The investigators indicate that email address harvesting usually is
automated, because spam can hit the addresses soon after they are used publicly
the first time; the spam was not targeted; and some addresses were picked up off
web pages even when they weren't visible to the eye. Still, they say, consumers
can protect their email addresses from harvesting programs. Here's how:
1. Consider "masking" your email address.
Masking involves putting a word or phrase in your email address so that it
will trick a harvesting computer program, but not a person. For example, if
your email address is "johndoe@myisp.com," you could mask it as "johndoe@spamaway.myisp.com."
Be aware that some newsgroup services or message boards won't allow you to
mask your email address and some harvesting programs may be able to pick out
common masks.
2. Use a separate screen name for chatting. If
you use chat rooms, use a screen name that's not associated with your email
address. Consider using the screen name only for online chat.
3. Set up disposable addresses. Decide if you
want to use two email addresses - one for personal messages and one for
posting in public. Consider using a disposable email address service that
creates separate email addresses that forwards to your permanent account. If
one of the disposable addresses begins to receive spam, you can shut it off
without affecting your permanent address.
4. Use two email accounts. If you work for a
business or organization that wants to receive email from the public, consider
creating separate accounts or disposable email addresses for that purpose,
rather than having an employee's address posted in public.
5. Use a unique email address, containing both
letters and numbers. Your choice of email address may affect the amount of
spam you receive because some spammers use "dictionary attacks" to email many
possible name combinations at large ISPs or email services, hoping to find a
valid address.
Meantime, what can you do with the spam in your
in-box? Report it, making sure that you include the full email header. The
information in the header makes it possible to follow up on your complaint. Send
your spam to:
- The Federal Trade Commission, at uce@ftc.gov.
The FTC uses the emails in this database to pursue law enforcement actions
against people who send deceptive spam.
- Your ISP's abuse desk. Often the email address
is abuse@yourispname.com or postmaster@yourispname.com. Forwarding your spam
to your ISP lets them know about the spam problem on their system and helps
them to stop it. Include a copy of the spam, along with the full email header,
and at the top of the message, state that you're complaining about being
spammed.
- The sender's ISP. Most ISPs want to cut off
spammers who abuse their system. Include a copy of the message and header
information and state that you're complaining about spam.
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