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Solutions and Services: Providing Professional Solutions For Your Business or Personal Future Online. Tips Page 2: To make your internet experience more rewarding and productive. Tips for rookies and professionals dealing with web design, web site construction, web hosting, email, submission and much more. *********************************************** Tip 13: What Can I Do about Porn Spam and Spam. From Morality In Media http://www.moralityinmedia.org With the rise of the Internet, Morality in Media has received many complaints about pornographic e-mail messages. This request came in recently to our e-mail in-basket:
Here are some suggestions that may be able to help you: "Unsolicited commercial e-mail" (UCE) is informally know as "spam," and if it's pornographic -- typically with links to pornographic Web sites -- it's called "porn spam." (Why is UCE named after the famous luncheon meat? The name comes from a routine from the British comedy group Monty Python, in which the word "spam" is repeated over and over again. Some techie years ago connected the "spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, spam" with the blizzard of junk e-mail, and the name stuck.) Since "spam" can be about anything, the suggestions here deal with all kinds of UCE, not just "porn spam." First, some basic tips:
So how do you find out whom to contact? In the body of the spam message, there are almost always instructions for how the sender wants you to respond to the message. Often they will want you to visit a web site or send mail to an email address. This address will almost always be bogus. Look for the "domain name" in the bogus address. This is the part after the @ sign of an email address or the last part of the server name in a URL (Internet address, "Uniform Resource Locator"). For example, in the URL of http://www.bogus.com/somepage.html, the domain is simply "bogus.com." If the links in the porn spam message are just a line of numbers, you can translate them into a "normal" IP address. The anti-spam people at Abuse.net have a translator for that. There's a direct link to the translator in our "Outside Resources" links below. You then need to track down the adminstrator of that domain. How? If the domain is in the ".com," ".org," ".net," or ".edu" domains, you can find the administrative contact through InterNIC, which is the official registrant of names in those top-level domains (TLDs). You can go directly to the Web site for the InterNIC Directory and look up the administrative contact there. Once you've tracked down the administrator through the InterNIC Directory, simply email the entire message to the person listed as the administrative contact. Explain that you've been "spammed." The administrator may have further requirements, but this is the person or group you want to be in contact with. An "entire message" means one with complete "headers." How do you get the "headers?" They are typically hidden in e-mail messages, but your e-mail software can be switched to "view full headers." The procedure differs in different e-mail programs. In Microsoft Outlook, for example, you open or highlight a message, pull down the "File" menu, go down to "Properties," then click the tab that says "Internet." The people at SpamCop.net have some instructions on how to find the "headers" on about 20 different e-mail programs, including Eudora, Hotmail, Yahoo! Mail, WebTV, and others. The full "headers" will look something like this:
If there's more than one domain name in the "headers," to find the original source of the message, you'll have to look back to see which was the first e-mail (SMTP -- Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server to receive the message on its journey. There should be a time reference on it -- in the example here the third line from the top refers to Monday, April 3rd, 2000 at 16:45 hours (4:45 p.m. local time). Send the headers, along with the main text of the spam message, to the adminstrators to whom you're complaining. A frequently asked question: "How did they get my e-mail address?"Newsweek reporter Jennifer Tanaka put it this way in her article Crammed with Spam, in the April 10, 2000 issue:
Some outside resources on spamming:
One suggestion: You may want to consider getting a filtered Internet Service Provider (ISP). Filtered ISPs block -- to the limits of their technical capabilities -- the porn Web sites that the porn spam messages link to. However, they don't block the porn spam itself. There are links to some filtered ISPs on our "Other Resources" page. If you found this information useful, or if you have further questions, please let us know. (TOP) You can advertise with us locally and nationally! Email us and we will send you the information. Make Payment Online for Monthly Billing for Hosting Services or Design Services via your Visa or MasterCard. Once you receive your billing Email from us just come here and Click on the following Icon: |