Spam
Fighting Tips For Website Owners
By Eric
Lester
Website
owners face a unique challenge. Making an email address public to
communicate with your visitors also makes that address a magnet
for spam. Learn how to minimize your risk and still provide that
important email contact.
Having
a host that provides exceptional Spam blocking services is a must
these days. Webmasters and business owners can find their domain
email particularly at risk to Spam as their email addresses may
be freely available on their websites for both humans, and so-called
"spambots" to find. By following a few simple guidelines,
you can reduce the stress on your Spam filters by making your email
a far harder target to hit. Note that most of these tips are "preventative"
in nature. If you read one and know you've already exposed your
email to that very threat, then you will either need to lose that
address or make sure you have a really good filter.
Fooling
the Sensors
As
a webmaster or the owner of an online store, you want visitors to
have a simple avenue of contact. Placing your email address on your
site provides this simple avenue, but that avenue is wide, and more
than just your customers will journey down it. Having an email address
properly formatted and linked from your website makes it the perfect
target for spambots. Much like search engine bots that spider the
web cataloging information, these bots harvest email addresses for
use in mass market email lists. Keeping your email visible to humans
but invisible to bots can be accomplished a variety of ways.
- Don't
link your email with a "mailto:" hyperlink
- Spell
out your address, for example "sales at yourdomain.com"
- Display
your email graphically, but don't link the graphic
- Advanced
users may consider displaying email using Macromedia Flash, as
most bots can't understand links embedded within Flash. This preserves
the ability for humans to quickly click your email address and
send. This is not to suggest your entire site be in Flash, simply
a single email "button."
Keeping
the Secret
This
may seem like common sense, but simply minimizing the exposure of
your email off your website, as well as on, will aide in stemming
the tide of Spam. Your professional email should be used as sparingly
as possible. Don't use it to sign up for personal newsletters or
enter into contest forms on other sites. No matter what assurances
of privacy a site may provide, the likelihood an address will be
Spammed increases each time it's used. Keep your professional and
personal matters highly separated. If you want to get a newsletter,
even a professional one, use a home address or consider the use
of a free email account. There are a variety of services from large
Internet portals like Yahoo and Google. Not only are they free,
but they also provide built-in Spam filters, making their use far
more preferable for "high risk" situations.
Finally,
though it should be completely obvious, don't respond to unsolicited
mass email in any way. Don't click on their links, reply to the
mail, or buy their products. It should be obvious, but the fact
is, the reason we all continue to be deluged with unsolicited emails
is actually quite simple. They are still profitable to the people
sending them. Even if their response rate is in the tenths of a
percent, they still make money and thus still send out more. The
people who respond are the ones that ensure a Spam filled future
for us all.
The
Removal Scam
Spam
arrives, but, not to fear, there's a helpful removal link at the
bottom. Click, submit, reply, whatever - they come in many flavors,
and all of them are potentially deadly. Though a natural response
it to use these removal tools, it's that natural response upon which
Spammers prey. Following "removal" instructions may do
one of two things. It may remove you from the list, or it may simply
be the confirmation a mass emailer needs that the address asking
to be removed is, in fact, a real live email account. Instead of
stopping unwanted emails, the email account will only receive more,
since it has become more valuable than before. It's more valuable
because there's a confirmation someone is actively using it. Are
all removal links scams? No, they aren't. Some removal links are
legitimate. Determining whether a removal link is completely valid
is difficult. Never click removal links from unsolicited mass emails,
they are most suspect.
Last
Lines of Defense
The
final lines of defense are filters. Keeping your professional email
as quiet as possible and safe from roaming spambots are the primary
preventative measures you can reasonably be expected to take. All
that remains are filters, on both a server and local level. For
site owners, having a host with strong anti-Spam and virus filters
installed on your server is your best line of defense. A wide variety
of server side filters are available, such as SpamAssassin and SpamAway
(from Postini). This kind of service stops Spam and viruses from
ever reaching your inbox. Ideally, like SpamAway, the service will
provide a web based interface to verify it's quarantined emails
and make sure nothing was "over filtered".
Less
effective and generally redundant in face of server side filters,
are filters built into email programs. These filters will generally
be simple blacklists or filters built on regular expressions. Some
may have may have more advanced Bayesian filers built in that can
"learn" from being fed a selection of Spam email. It's
preferable such a filter reside on the server and process a large
amount of emails in order to be most effective. Postini's SpamAway
functions beyond the server level, intercepting Spam and virus filters
before they reach their intended destination's network.
Conclusions
Keeping
your business email as confidential as possible is the best preventative
measure against Spam. If you need to have contact email on your
site, ensure that it is not directly linked or formatted in such
a way as to make it an easy target for spambots. The ideal solution
is a simple button in Flash that humans may use like any other button
but that is unreadable from a bot's perspective. Beyond confidentiality,
ensure you have strong, robust filters for your site's email addresses.
This is the only option for an address that's already been picked
up by the mass emailers. It's difficult to completely staunch the
flow of Spam, but good filters can put a stop to most of it.
About
the Author:
Mr.
Lester has served for 4 years as the webmaster for ApolloHosting.com
and previously worked in the IT industry an additional 5 years,
acquiring knowledge of hosting, design, and search engine optimization.
Apollo Hosting provides website
hosting, ecommerce
hosting, vps
hosting, and web design services to a wide range of customers.
Established
in 1999, Apollo prides itself on the highest levels of customer
support.
More
Web Education Articles
|