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Spam Proof Your Website
by Scott F. Geld
http://www.MarketingBlaster.com
You realize
that it's important for visitors to your Website to be able to contact you by
Email, and you want to provide easy Email access for customers and potential
customers. Somehow though, you need to protect yourself from a ton of unwanted
junk mail (Spam) arriving in your inbox. With a little forethought you can
minimize your vulnerability.
There are
people who compile Email addresses just for the purposes of selling them to
spammers. It's hard to control Spam when this happens. To fight back against
Spam, the first step is finding out how the spammers got your Email address in
the first place.
A wise Internet
marketer uses a Website host provider that allows unlimited Email addresses or
aliases. An alias refers to an alternate email address that forwards email to
your real address. When you use an alias,
you're 'real' Email address doesn't have to be generally available and
susceptible to Spam. If you have several employees in your company, you will
need multiple aliases.
You have to
provide a contact Email address when you register your domain name. If you use
your real Email address, then it's readily available to everyone, and that means
the spammers too. When you set up your domain, use a portable Email address, for
example Hotmail. If you have multiple domains, you should use an alias (domains@domain.com)
on your primary domain for all registrations . This allows your email software
to filter and save any legitimate Emails that come to the alias from your
registrar's domain.
You are asking
for problems if you use your real Email address when filling out a Web form or
when you subscribe to a newsletter. It's better to create an Email address that
is unique for each Website or newsletter. In fact, many Email users create a
customized email address for each newsletter they receive, or for each Website
that they filled in a form. If for example, you subscribe to a newsletter from
Greatideas.com (fictitious site name) create an Email address of "greatideas.com@yourdomain.com",
and route the email that this address receives to your real Email address. That
way you will always know where the Email originated. If that address starts
getting Spam or junk mail, you can simply filter it out with your software. Use
a unique Email address if you submit to search engines or free-for- all pages (FFA.s).
Your own
Website can be the biggest source of Email addresses used by junk mailers. Many
Websites list multiple Emails in their contact details, and any time an Email
appears on your site in plain text, even hidden in a Javascript or form field,
that address can be captured.
If you want to
avoid being the victim of spammers, always think about where and how your Email
address is broadcast and consider if you are making it easy to be a victim of
unwanted junk mail.
Scott F. Geld
is the Director of Marketing for MarketingBlaster.com, a company providing
targeted traffic and direct leads starting at only $5. For more info:
http://www.MarketingBlaster.com
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