- Joined
- Aug 3, 2003
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It's an old problem, but has anyone found any GOOD ways to deal with spam?
I'm getting an average of 120 spam emails a day. Until recently I was using eNom's email system, which I learned the hard way was too aggressive in flagging spam, and often was hiding emails from clients (#*$^^!!!) as well as emails from eNom itself. Really stupid. I use Outlook, so I never saw the hidden "junk" folder until too late. eNom has been replaced.
So... I allow my new email handler to do it's own spam flagging, I do not want to lose clients. I can create "filter rules" in outlook, but spammers are too creative, there is no common text and/or the spam is mostly images whose names change with every spam. I expect the email address that I use in WHOIS and on webpages to get onto spam lists, but oddly enough I get most spam twice, one for the WHOIS email address, and again for the email that I use personally.
So... anyone have any good solutions? I'm thinking about moving to all new email addresses, perhaps every other year.
I'm getting an average of 120 spam emails a day. Until recently I was using eNom's email system, which I learned the hard way was too aggressive in flagging spam, and often was hiding emails from clients (#*$^^!!!) as well as emails from eNom itself. Really stupid. I use Outlook, so I never saw the hidden "junk" folder until too late. eNom has been replaced.
So... I allow my new email handler to do it's own spam flagging, I do not want to lose clients. I can create "filter rules" in outlook, but spammers are too creative, there is no common text and/or the spam is mostly images whose names change with every spam. I expect the email address that I use in WHOIS and on webpages to get onto spam lists, but oddly enough I get most spam twice, one for the WHOIS email address, and again for the email that I use personally.
So... anyone have any good solutions? I'm thinking about moving to all new email addresses, perhaps every other year.