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					Email Tips
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			COMBATING SPAM – 
			How to Fight and Beat Everyone’s Email Enemy 
			With over 90% 
			of all emails being spam these days, we've all 
			received those unwanted e-mail messages from people promising to 
			help us lose weight or make a lot of money, not to mention all those 
			"unmentionable" e-mails.  Take heart--there are several steps you 
			can take to reduce the number of those junk e-mail messages you 
			receive.   
			One great 
			option available to Globalink web hosting customers is Spam 
			Assassin, a program we can run at your request, that will either 
			delete all suspected spam*, or filter into a junk mail folder that 
			you can check periodically (just to make sure nothing that you 
			wanted to receive got classified as spam.)  Of course, there 
			are a lot of other steps you can take to further eliminate the spam 
			menace.    
			DIFFERENT 
			EMAIL ADDRESSES FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES 
			First, be 
			careful who you give your main email address to.   If you want to be 
			able to sign up for contests, etc., it is best to use an email other 
			than your main work email.  For instance, you can use a hotmail, 
			yahoo, or other free address for all of your personal emails, like 
			all the jokes you’ve already received three or four times, or for 
			spam resulting from your decision to sign up for free offers, etc.  
			That way, you don’t have all that junk vying for your attention when 
			you’re trying to get work done.  Think of your main 
			business address as you would your mobile phone number....you don't 
			give that out to just everyone, do you?    
			Speaking of 
			personal emails, keep in mind that you don't know where all those 
			forwards go after you send them out.   When you forward jokes or 
			other e-mail to several people, be sure to use the "blind cc" option 
			instead of listing everyone under "to:".  Then, delete the long 
			lists of all the previous recipients' e-mail addresses from the body 
			of the message.  Last, be sure to ask all your e-mail buddies to do 
			the same.  
			Also, when 
			you sign up for on-line agreements, look for a box that might 
			already be checked for you that says you agree to hear about other 
			offers from that company, and even from that company’s “partners”. 
			This is one way that you get on mass distribution lists.  You can 
			usually uncheck the box and still get the same offer you're signing 
			up for. 
			A tip that 
			might not seem logical but is important -- don’t reply to spam, even 
			if it is to request to be removed from their list.  Although 
			reputable companies honor such requests, less-reputable spammers 
			will only use your reply to confirm that your email address is real, 
			and they’ll send even more spam your way.    
			You can also 
			report spam to the sender’s email provider.  (One way to figure out 
			who that is, is to right-click on the sender’s information and click 
			on “Properties”. )  If you’re not sure how to determine their 
			provider, we’ll be glad to help our customers if you email us at
            Help
            Center    
			If you have a 
			website that lists your email address, spammers can “harvest” your 
			e-mail address off the website.  It seems like a “Catch 22”, because 
			you want people to be able to contact you off your website, yet you 
			don’t want spammers to find you.  It is possible to list your e-mail 
			address without making it a hyperlink so that this won't be a 
			problem.  Or, you might consider using a distribution-list or 
			generic-sounding email (that probably would be spammed anyway), like
			
			sales@yourcompany.com  or
			
			info@yourcompany.com, and then you 
			can use a filter in your email software to put these emails in a 
			separate email box that you check a little less frequently than your 
			main email.    
			FILTERS – 
			Saving you time when you check your email 
			While we’re 
			on the subject, let’s consider the e-mail filters offered with most 
			e-mail programs.  You may not realize it, but you can send emails to 
			different inboxes.  You might want to have all the emails that list 
			you as “cc” go to a different folder from those that have you in the 
			“to” field.  Or, you might want to have only emails from people in 
			your address book go to your main inbox, with other emails going to 
			a separate box that you don’t check quite as often.  
			  
			Different 
			programs have different options for filtering.  For instance, in 
			Outlook Express, under Tools, you can click on Message Rules and 
			then Mail to set up criteria for messages to be deleted 
			automatically.  Under Message Rules, you can also go to Block 
			Senders to create a list of addresses you do not wish to receive any 
			mail from. In Outlook, look under Actions and then Junk Mail for 
			similar options.   Whatever program you use for your e-mail, you can 
			check the help screen for more information about how to filter your 
			incoming e-mail.    
			For a nominal 
			service fee, Globalink can send a technician to your business to set 
			up filters according to your specifications.  
			
			Contact us for details.    
			WHITE LISTS AND BLACKLISTS - Controlling who can send 
			you emails 
			For our Globalink email customers, we can show you 
			how to set up special lists to help control email.  If your 
			filters are filtering out email that you wanted to receive, like 
			newsletters, you can add those senders to your "white list", so that 
			emails will get through the filter and into your inbox.   
			On the other hand, if the spam 
			filters aren't recognizing some messages as spam, you can add those 
			senders, and even their domains, to a "black list", so that all 
			those messages will be blocked from coming to your inbox. 
			
			Contact US for details.    
			Along these same lines, the
			Spam Arrest
			program puts tight controls on who can 
			send emails to you.  The first time someone sends an email to 
			you, they receive a message which they have to verify by typing some 
			letters that they see on the screen.  It works by stopping 
			robots and computers from sending you automated spam.  
			 
			WHAT IF I 
			DIDN’T KNOW HOW TO DO ALL THAT BEFORE, AND NOW THE PROBLEM IS OUT OF 
			HAND? 
			If your spam 
			problem is just too severe, you can also change your e-mail username 
			with Globalink if you feel there is just no end to the spam.  This 
			isn't the most convenient solution, since you need to notify 
			everyone in your address book of you new address, but it can help in 
			extreme situations.   (By the way, if you do this, be sure to email 
			everyone from your old address to tell them of the change, in 
			case they have filters going that would put your new address in a 
			junk folder.)  When you choose your new address, be sure not to use 
			a dictionary word or common name, so that computer-generated spam 
			lists won't as easily find your address.  We’d be glad to help 
			advise you of good options for new addresses.    
			IDEAS FOR YOUR 
			NEW EMAIL ADDRESS If you 
			currently use your first name, like 
			
			
			joe@yourdomain.com, consider 
			changing it to be your first initial with last name, like 
			
			
			jsmith@yourdomain.com.  Those 
			combinations are a lot harder for spammers to guess at.  The 
			spammers have software that searches for all common first names, and 
			some of them can even search for those first names followed by a 
			single initial, so we don't recommend doing an address like 
			
			joes@yourdomain.com. 
			 Of course, if your name really is something 
			as common as Joe Smith, you might want to get extra creative and 
			include a middle initial, use a nickname, etc. 
			  
			For more tips on 
			how to avoid spam see the FTC's site,
			
			www.ftc.gov/spam. 
			For tips on 
			avoiding online scams, please see:
		
            *Note:  
			Spam Assassin catches approximately 95% of all 
			spam.  If you have enabled Spam Assassin on your email account 
			and are still getting a lot of spam, 
            contact 
			us for further help, and please know 
			that it could actually be worse---what you're receiving is really 
			only 5% of what the spammers are trying to send you!  
			
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