Internet

I have used any number of spam solutions. I receive between 500-1000 spams a day. My Rick@Leaders.net account has been around the internet for a long time, and it is on nearly every spammers list by now.

What I have done is sign up with http://www.mailblocks.com. All my mail to Rick@Leaders.net gets forwarded to their servers. If you write to me, and I don’t know you yet, Mail Blocks replies with a request for you to verify that you are a person and not a machine spamming me. A quick click, enter some numbers, and your message is delivered to me. From that point on, you are authenticated for me (and for any other mailblocks customers who allow my authentication to deliver mail to them).

This has done a couple of things for me. First, I never have to download the spam. It never makes it to my local computer. Second, while I still briefly skim my “pending (mostly spam)” messages, I frankly don’t worry about messages with no or misleading subjects, as most spam is these days. If the person doesn’t go to the minimal effort to confirm that they want the message delivered, well, I don’t worry about not receiving it. AND, if they DID want it to get through, I don’t miss it accidentally amongst 4200 spams.

I also use this for my wife. She was getting some really NASTY stuff all of a sudden. While it was only a couple of spam a week, they were so nasty that they upset her. Now she uses mailblocks, too, and there won’t be any more barnyard activity accidentally popping up in her preview window in outlook.

This is not a totally perfect solution. But it is working GREAT for me. They also offer webmail, of course, so when I am traveling I can focus in on an inbox that does not include thousands of spam messages. This has been a HUGE time saver as well.

Email Impersonation

July 15, 2002

in Internet

Re: http://radio.weblogs.com/0100887/2002/07/14.html#a339

On CompuServe during the late 80’s and early 90’s, individuals had user IDs that were authenticated by at least the fact that they used a credit card, usually one that wasn’t stolen, to sign up for and use the service. This meant that while someone could run through userIDs if they were blocked from a forum, it did mean that the person writing the message was the person who owned the userID.

Today, I do not know who is sending me email. Viruses immitate friends or steal my identity to send messages from someone else’s computer. And as Jon said, NO ONE SEEMS TO BE DOING ANYTHING ABOUT IT.

I do not understand, for example, why Microsoft has not made it dirt simple to have authenticated mail between Outlook users, and through and between Exchange servers.

Email is crucial to me. It helps me work from a home office rather than a corporate cubicle. Yet today I have no easy and supported way to demonstrate that a message from me is valid and FROM ME. It’s frustrating. And completely unnecessary.

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