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Some Ways To Avoid Spam On Gmail

jafo writes "In general, Gmail has been extremely spam-free. More recently, however, it's gotten dramatically worse. I've written up some thoughts on Gmail spam and keeping the spam down. Want less spam on Gmail (and likely others)? Try generating an account name using "apg -M L -t"."

7 of 308 comments (clear)

  1. guessing names spamming by acomj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have a couple gmail acounts. The spam they get, and its not alot so far, seems to be guess the name type. The name in the "to" field is close but not exactly my address. I think gmail just delivers it but marks it instantly as spam so the spammers don't know which are "live" addresses and which are non existant ones.

    just my experience..

    Its going to get worse though. As more people use it and when it goes out of beta and some spammers can start getting accounts and testing...

    Heck I have a domain with one email addess (which is a catch all). I've never ever given out the address, yet I get spam there... Lots of it.

    Its making email so much less usefull

  2. I avoid spam on gmail! by EvilStein · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just don't use 'effin Gmail! GAH! Just because everyone and their cat has 50 gmail invites to give out doesn't mean that you have to use it.

    SpamAssassin is catching nearly 100% of the spam bound for my regular personal email account. I don't need Google's help with that.

  3. A good article, but... by Richie1984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a well written article, but I don't feel it brings anything new to the discussion. Yes, spammers were eventually going to target GMail because of it's popularity, but there isn't really any detailed information in the article as to how Google is defending itself, merely a lot of (interesting) specualtion.

    And while the same techniques are used to try and stop spammers from finding your account, there aren't any gmail specific ideas, which is what I hoped I would find int he article.

    --
    I'm not stressed. I'm just terribly, terribly alert.
  4. My experience by Underholdning · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have two gmail accounts. One is myl33tusername@gmail - the other is firstname.lastname@gmail. Guess what - the latter is now swamped with spam. Granted, gmail properly files them all in the spam folder, but it shows that the spammers are already firing off massive dictionary attacks on gmail.

  5. Re:I hate my postman!! by MrRTFM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    hey, this was a joke (ok - a bad one)

    The point is that information is not always shared in the way we think it will be shared - whenever there is a human contact in the process, then there is the chance that your details will be made public. It might a postman, your ex-wife, a workmate, etc.

    You never really know when your details are made available to the spammers, but more often than not it is a 'harmless' passing on of details, that does the damage.

    --
    You can't expect to wield supreme executive power, just because some watery tart threw a sword at you
  6. Spam vs False Positivies by echocharlie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The evidence is empirical. The conclusions are common sense. I'm surprised the article doesn't talk about False Positives, the bane of spam filtering. I usually sign up for a few mailing lists, and then create filters to automatically archive them. Recently, a lot of my mailing list traffic has been marked as Spam, even though my filter specifically says to archive all mail from the list.

  7. Re:Amateur! by JavaBear · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Strangely I've never seen one bit of spam on my abuse@ account...

    Maybe that could be a solution, use a sub domain as the actual mail address, and just prepend abuse@ as the address, so instead of spam-me-not@domain.com you'd use abuse@spam-me-not.domain.com.
    Those buggers won't be able to figure out which addresses are 'safe' to spam, and which ones may quite likely bring down hell upon their little minds.