Mon Apr 7, 2008 9:15PM EDT
See Comments (89)
I'm always amazed at how many people volunteer their email address on forums
and comments sections. I suppose no one told them spammers use programs that
crawl the Web in search of email addresses, or perhaps they just don't care.
As a site owner, I often hesitate about posting my email address publicly,
but sometimes it's inevitable.
I've used different tricks to deter spammers, like using graphics, contact forms, or spelling out the entire email address (yourname [at] yahoo.com), but somehow, those accounts still manage to get spam. You're probably familiar with CAPTCHA (Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart) since most websites with logins and forms use them, but until now I haven't seen one for individual email addresses.
The folks at Carnegie Mellon University have created an application called Mailhide to help you hide your email address. Users have to enter their email address and copy a piece of code that displays a partial email address (yah...@yahoo.com) wherever it's posted. If a person really wants to find out what the entire email address is, they'll have to solve one of the two CAPTCHAs the application displays. HTML code is also provided for website owners.
The words can be hard to read, but once solved, the visitor is taken to a page that shows the complete email address (here's an example). It's a bit tricky, but it keeps spammers from collecting your email address.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
sounds like a good tool. however, I have found that in over 8 years nothing beats the google toolbar with popup blocker, just install from a fresh O.S. or from where your at is fine as well and bam no more butt pirate popups or the need to see who created them however they should be boiled in oil and castrated :) just for fun for creating them. pop ups and junk mail creaters are lamers always have been always will be, they are making up for the sexual depression they suffer from because they have no life :D
Don't rely on CAPTCHA http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080415-gone-in-60-seconds-spambot-cracks-livehotmail-captcha.html
This article is completly useless!
I don't even send emails anymore ... there's too much email to go through. now I just call people, or I have my virtual assistant (www.RedButler.com) send my emails and keep me posted. My old assistant would spend hours going through spam, wasted money.
This wont work because certain sites you may buy online from sell your email address anyways. Or if you register to a site. This is useless. Spam will never be stopped.
Does this CAPTCHA affect email lists you signed up for??? Can someoen let me know? Thanks!
Sometimes I use different computers to access my e-mail, so what i do -apart from not publishing my address unnecessarily - is use the virtual keyboard that comes with Windows. At least it seems to prevent my address or password from being stolen. But I'd like to hear a specialist on how effective that is.
Wow, it's imporrible to read those CAPTCHA words. It's enough to DRIVE AWAY clients if you ask me..
My experience with CATPCHA has been that it doesn't work worth a darn (go to any Yahoo! chat room. Either CAPTCHA doesn't work or Yahoo! is only trying to make everyone think they are trying to stop spammers/bots and they're actually collecting fees from the spambots), so why would it work here?
yanc ... @hotmail.com
Yahoo chat forums use CAPTCHA but it is still literally full of bots.
I thought in box was the true people and bulk was bad. So I have been deleting my bulk messages and my bank has been sending me messages and in bulk and i have been deleting them. So please stop all the junk mail and give me my real mail . Now i have to call my bank and tell them that i have been deleting them.
I think spams r pretty cool. especially if it helps u nd ur PC.
If you suspect scammers, send copy to FBI.
When you register a secondary email address on your Yahoo profile which they promise to keep hidden - this one seems to be accessed by spammers somehow. In addition, the Yahoo profile seems to acquire your name, mailing address, phone number, and other personal information from your use of it when placing orders for merchandise. So it is more a matter of integrity than technology, imho.
Why doesn't the writer address the best method of email protection against spammers? ChoiceMail!! It's called "challenge/response" . If you send an email to my cox pop address, and I don't know you, it sends a message back asking if you are a human and redirects you to click on a link and enter a "captcha" code like what the writer talks about. Then you enter in a code, then choicemail will validate your email. I used to get 50+ spam emails a day with cox internet, and now I might get a rogue 1 spam email every couple months, if that! Ganns1980 is dead on with his reply also. My yahoo account is used for those websites that require an email that I really don't care about...it's used for crap..basically...whatever.. My Cox pop accounts are protected by choicemail, and my web based emails that I do care about are sent to my Gmail account. I get almost 1400+ spams a week in yahoo, and only 13 a week or less in gmail.
That is sooo cool! You guys are so smart.
i was gone for two days last week, and when i got home i had over a hundred spam ads om my computer. luckily i can get rid of them with one punch, but i would like to know how to stop them, before they get in my e-mail/
it doesn't work.. you put that HTML in a space for an email address and it says 'invalid, enter email address..' nice though though..
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6 Posted by singhsunny357 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:23PM EDT Report Abuse
f u