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How
To Avoid Spam Robots |
by:
Jim
Edwards |
©
Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Despite the fact that Federal legislation
(the CANSPAM act) made it illegal, harvesting
email addresses from the web using automated
robots remains alive and well.
Spammers who need fresh email addresses
release software spider programs that comb
the Internet and suck email addresses off
Web pages, guest books, and anywhere else
you might post your email address.
Once they get your email address, spammers
will trade it around like 5th graders with
a new pack of Pokemon cards at recess and
you can expect the avalanche of email to
begin flooding your inbox.
In order to combat this still rampant practice
of stealing email addresses from websites
and sending people email they don't want,
the following tips should help protect you.
** Break It Up **
Obviously the best way to avoid getting
picked up by an email harvester is not to
post your email anywhere on anyone's website
(including your own).
If the only way someone can get your email
is if you give it to them, that creates
a similar situation to operating with an
unlisted phone number.
If telemarketers can't get your phone number,
they can't call.
If you must post your email address, post
it in a way that a robot won't recognize
it as an email address. Instead of posting
YOURNAME@YOURDOMAIN.COM, you can put YOURNAME
(AT) YOURDOMAIN.COM and then, in parenthesis,
put (replace AT with @ to email me).
Though it seems like an extra step for legitimate
email, you'll find it a very effective technique.
** Use An Image **
Currently, online spiders (ANY spider, including
search engines) cannot read text that appears
in a graphic or picture. If you must display
an email address on a page, then do it by
typing your email address into your favorite
graphics program and saving the image as
a .gif or .jpg. Then post the image onto
your web page so people can see the email,
but spiders cannot. This too creates an
extra step for people because they must
type in your email address, but it's an
effective solution if you must display an
email address on your own website.
** Use An Email Form **
Another way to cut down on spam originating
from your own website is simply not to display
an email at all.
Instead, allow customers and prospects to
contact you through a form where they fill
in fields, click a button, and your website
emails you their message.
A note of caution: make sure the form script
you use does not keep your email address
visible in the form code.
If the form code contains the email address,
spam robots can find it even though you
don't see it on the page.
** Make It Hard To Guess **
Sometimes you'll get unsolicited email because
a spammer guessed your email address.
It's not a far stretch to imagine that someone
probably has the email Jim@yourdomain.com,
so spammers will do a "dictionary" attack
on common usernames.
One way to defeat this is to place a "dot"
(.) in your email address, such as Jim.Edwards@yourdomain.com.
The dot makes it virtually impossible for
spammers to guess your email address.
About the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist
and the co-author of an amazing new ebook
that will teach you how to use fr^e articles
to quickly drive thousands of targeted visitors
to your website or affiliate links...
Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands
of NEW visitors to your website for weeks,
even months... without spending a dime on
advertising! ==> http://www.turnwordsintotraffic.com
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