Mon Aug 18, 2008 5:06PM EDT
See Comments (74)
Reader Jeffrey writes: All of a sudden, I am receiving an inordinate amount of "bulk" email in my Yahoo account. Many of the identical emails are sent day after day, which I delete without opening. My question is this: Assuming they are sent to me automatically, would there be any point in opening them and responding with a note that I am not interested, and that I would like for them to discontinue sending them to me. Of course, if there is an attachment, I would not open them under any circumstance.
First off, some slight clarification: There is outright spam and there is commercial, bulk email, and though the line can be blurry, following careful instructions can often eliminate the latter without your having to rely on your spam filter or delete button.
First you need to determine what kind of junk mail you have. Is it being sent by a company you've ever done business with, or something you might have signed up for in the past, however long ago? Most commercial mail being sent by legitimate companies will have an unsubscribe link at the bottom, and though those links can take a few days (up to 10 in some cases) to go into effect, if you follow the instructions to unsubscribe from a mailing list (be sure to complete the transaction and read what to do carefully so you don't miss anything) the messages should stop.
The problem of course is that with true, unsolicited spam, those links don't work. In fact, many pundits feel that clicking them only validates your email and will end up getting you more spam. I doubt this is really the case—once you're on the list, you're on the list—but the basic point is valid: Clicking unsubscribe links on spam is a big waste of time.
As for sending email replies, that's an even worse idea: Virtually all commercial junk mail and unsolicited spam is sent from an unmonitored email address. Actually typing a note to reply is an even bigger waste of time since you have to type something up and no one will ever read it, and since you're likely to get an email bounceback, you're actually creating even more spam for yourself to deal with later. (As well, since a lot of spam is sent using a forged "from" address, you're probably creating spam for some other poor sap, too.)
So no, don't ever reply via email to a spam message, though we all appreciate your thoughtful and considerate approach to dealingwith the matter.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Make sure you look at the senders on the "spam". I had an airline notify me of a 2 flight changes, that I had to confirm. If I hadn't checked the spam I would have had a bigger problem. ie: changed flight! Best bet is to review, mark any that are not spam and then dump the rest. Also make sure to go to your trash and empty that regularly, to free up space on your computer. I agree that to unsubscribe is a BIG waste of time, and yes there are more spam it seems that show up later-
Gmail has the absolute best spam filter for their email... yaya_princessblingbling is correct. I am very happy with Gmail. At work we have actual hardware from Barracuda to kill our spam... it works about half as good as Gmail.
I get several thousand spam emails a day. It's really annoying. I just use Thunderbird and set up my own filters for what is legit and what is spam. In the end I only have to sort through a hundred or so emails a day to see if anything legit came in. And this is AFTER putting my mail through several non-Blackmail RBL's - if it wasnt for those I would probably have over 15k spam emails a day. I find it best to use temporary emails for doing intermittent things on sites that might spam you to death, and then much later change your email address. Its the address on signup that gets you the spam, usually changing your email address later doesnt get you more spam.
Regarding to a FREE coupon for a item is how SPAM got me, I have recv'd so many messages that I seriouly thought of changing me email address, but I unsubscribe as many as I could & NEVER will get "taken" again!
one sure thing is, no matter what you do you'll still get spam, in my view; the best way to avoid such headache is simply having more than one e-mail, one to use for your personal comunications, one for business, and one for subscription-based web sites (like forums or groups), the last one may get all the spam, you only use once per site (the confirmation reply), and, if you find the right e-mail provider; you may be able to forward all the e-mails you are interested in to your personal e-mail. one advice, to stop spam; dont give your e-mail !!
email has become a total wasteland. i don't open anything from a non-friend, I don't care if it looks legitimate or not. I feel sorry for legitimate companies trying to use email. I won't even open anything from my bank, or from my broker or from anyone anymore. If they really need me they will send a letter
Since we can't stop the large amounts of spam coming in, the best way to never see the spam is to set rules. I do it and they never touch my inbox. Takes some time to make the rules.
Yahoo! is probably one of the most ineffective "blockers of spam", probably since they are actively involved in selling this "service" for others to use. If you use Yahoo!, get an e-mail address with them that you NEVER use for any other purpose than to e-mail friends and family and you'll rarely (if ever) get any spam at all.
dis yo boi twin
I use Yahoo and it catches 95% of my spam. Just because you have an email account with them does not mean most spam will be tossed. To limit your spam to a Yahoo account I suggest you set your spam controls accordingly - once you do you will see a dramatic drop in spam. There are a number of legislative bills floating around to allow us to eliminate unwanted spam, but alas the lobbyists are blocking the bills. Once they do pass something - it will never be perfect as we've see with the No Call Laws - there won't be a complete solution anytime soon.
No matter what I do I get a high amount of spam. I have a filter on my email, I have my spam messages going directly into spam and all of my junk mail is set to directly be deleted. But it seems with yahoo no matter what I do I am still getting a high amount of spam delivered to my inbox. I go through and block the spam address which you can only block up to 500, and I am way passed that limit so yes it is a HUGE problem that is very annoying and I am seriously considering canceling my yahoo account because they are really bad at delivering the spam to my inbox even after all the attempts that I have made to stop it.
Yahoo has been selling your E-Mail addresses to the Companies that send us all this spam to help Raise revenue. Sending Spam to the Spam folder does nothing, Yahoo does not monitor or review Spam because they are making too much money. This is the price you pay for a free E-Mail address.
has anyone dealt with "MAILER_DAMEON" and others which all state that your mail was not deliverable. Last weekend my e-mail count was 28,000. I had help from my ISP and they have lessend. I ran Professional Anti Spyware, AVG and McFee.and they found nothing to account for what was going on. Anyone,
even when I do follow the directions of the commercial spam it keeps on coming.It's driving me crazy!I get kind of spam that offer u free stuff,then it logs on on to a different page,then another,another,then another.The other problem i have are those get rich fast spams.Those are realllllllllly annoying. This advice doesnt help at all.
A couple of VERY effictive solutions: 1) Set up a free account at SpamCop.net and forward the spam to them. They will then report it to the spamming ISP (without your info) and add the spamming IP address to their blacklist. 2) Use Complainterator (dot com to get it) to send an e-mail to the spamvertiser's hosting company asking them to remove the offender. I've had quite a few removed by using Complainterator.
cat
The BEST thing to do is to have two different e-mail addresses. One that you give to only friends and family, and one that you use when a website asks for your e-mail address. It works for me, my personal e-mail address gets absolutely NO junk mail at all! It's pretty cool.
The government gave us a "do not call" option for the telephone. It works and is both wonderful and long overdue. I'm sure they can do it for spam emails, too. But they so far refuse to. Why won't they do it? who's making money on this if no one is answering or responding to the spam emails? Someone must be or it wouldn't continue--or the government (or the email servers) would stop it.
Hello... What i dont understand is why sometimes (about 50% of the time) when i check the email was sent to another email address but somehow found itself coming into our account.
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6 Posted by fruchtm on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:03PM EDT Report Abuse
Never hit unsubscribe unless you know who the source is. Unsubscribe link could send you to a web page that will try to install malware