The Spam Dilemma by Jim Pretin
We have all had this experience. You log into your email account and discover
that you have some new messages. Fervent with anticipation, you open your inbox,
only to find nothing but solicitations and spam.
Most of the spam that I get in my inbox is abhorrent, but I still like to look
at it because some of it is quite entertaining. My favorites include subjects
such as 95% discounts on Canadian Viagra, quotes for 80 year mortgages, and ads
for practically every sort of pornographic web site on the net.
Those of you familiar with spam have probably noticed that the name of the
sender that appears next to the message subject is usually either a strange
email address or a bizarre name. Spammers do this because obviously they do not
want to reveal their real email address or name. They have developed programs
that can actually mutate their email address so that the recipient will not be
able to track where the email came from.
So, how did these freaks get your email address in the first place? One of the
ways is through opt-in email. At one time or another, we have all subscribed to
or ordered something online. In doing so, as part of the subscription or service
that you signed up for, you may have inadvertently or unknowingly agreed to
receive offers via email from that company in the future. As a result, they
begin to send you email. This is legal as long as the company provides you with
a way to unsubscribe from their mailing list.
However, the most nefarious email marketers do not provide you with a way to be
removed from their mailing list. To make matters worse, they will often sell
your email address and any other information you submitted to them to hundreds
of other companies who are looking for mailing lists. Before you know it, your
email address has been circulated far and wide to almost every online business
imaginable.
There are other methods that spammers will employ to get their grimy hands on
your email address. Sometimes what they do is once they have purchased a list of
email addresses from someone else, they will then send a joke or an interesting
cartoon to everyone on the list and ask that you forward it along to all your
friends and relatives. Once you forward the message, the spammer actually has a
program that can copy the list of addresses that the message has been forwarded
to and send it back to him or her. So now, that person not only has your email
address, but also has the email address of every one of your friends and
relatives. Using this tactic, clever email marketers can grow their list
exponentially.
Another popular technique is something called harvesting. Harvesting is quickly
becoming the most powerful, sophisticated, and most useful method for grabbing
thousands or even millions of email addresses almost instantaneously. This is
accomplished by writing a simple software program that searches through every
web site listed on a search engine for a certain keyword, and then quickly
scanning through each web site and copying any and all email addresses that are
posted there and then sending them back to the spammer. An example of harvesting
would be a program written to scan every website listed on Google for a certain
keyword, such as mortgage brokers, and then copying every email address that is
found on the various web sites that come up in the search, and emailing the
entire list back to the person doing the harvesting. In this manner, a person
could build a list containing thousands of email addresses of mortgage brokers
in less than an hour.
Harvesting has become a legal quandary, because spammers feel that it is
permissible to harvest email addresses that are posted on public websites
because, in their opinion, if someone has posted their email address for all to
see, then other people have the right to contact that person and ask them
questions or send them offers. However, web sites where email addresses are
posted have struck back with threats of legal action against anyone that copies
addresses and uses them for the purpose of building mailing lists or sending
marketing offers. Unfortunately, these web sites really have no way to block
this email theft, and it is becoming more rampant every day.
Spamming and email marketing is here to stay, as it is nearly impossible to
regulate or prohibit. Both big businesses and small businesses have a strong
incentive to send bulk email, because it does not cost anything, and helps them
increase their business. Sending regular mail or hiring telemarketers is
infinitely more costly. Also, people tend to discard solicitations sent to them
in the regular mail very quickly, and telemarketers are usually hung up on. As a
result, most companies favor sending massive amounts of email versus direct mail
or cold calling. So, you should not expect your inbox to be any less crammed
with spam anytime soon.
About the Author: Jim
Pretin is the owner of
http://www.forms4free.com,
a service that helps programmers make email forms .Source
of this article:
www.goarticles.com
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