Is E-Mail Obscuration Worth It?
ThenAgain asks: "Many sites obscure e-mail addresses by adding noise (like 'STOPSPAM') or by translating the punctuation into words (Ex: 'me at domain dot com'). This makes users feel good but does it actually help? Ten lines of perl could defeat any of the present schemes with ease and the spammers have shown plenty of adaptability. So if we're not helping hold back the flood of spam, why are we decreasing the utility of the web by eliminating mailto tags and forcing users to hand-correct the addresses in their mail clients?"
What I usually do is, whenever possible, to put who I'm giving my email address to as the initial part of the email address, ie. slashdot@davidcole.net so I will at least know who the jerk is who sold my address.
Otherwise, I use a hotmail account to commonly give out. Obfuscated email addresses are obnoxious.
David Cole
www.davidcole.net