To be completely safe from spammers will probably never be possible, but there are many tips that can more than likely cut back on the spam mail. First step, Never sign up for anything with your email if you do not trust the website. Many websites sell your information to other businesses to make a profit, not knowing or caring what others may want to use your information for. Step two, If you are sending out a broadcast email to more than ten other recipients at a time be sure to type their addresses carefully. With many emails to type at once it leaves room for error and you could email the wrong person giving your email address to a stranger.
i have tried this before , you cannot use a format option for an email address. But if i were you, i would make an emial address so that knowone can find it to spam you.
Currently there isn't one that I know of. Someone should make one!
Nope. It's to prevent "spammers" and "robots" Seriously, robots?
There are many ways to decrease spam. One is to make sure to only give your email address to sites who you trust, so that they do not give spammers access to it. Another is to use filters that will not allow you to receive mail from suspect networks.
how do you make a email address
From mailing lists. Spammers regularily attempt to get the lists of subscribers to mailing lists [some mail servers will give those upon request], knowing that the email addresses are unmunged and that only a few of the addresses are invalid. When mail servers are configured to refuse such requests, another trick might be used - spammers might send an email to the mailing list with the headers Return-Receipt-To: <email address> or X-Confirm-Reading-To: <email address>. Those headers would cause some mail transfer agents and reading programs to send email back to the <email address> saying that the email was delivered to / read at a given email address, divulging it to spammers. A different technique used by spammers is to request a mailing lists server to give him the list of all mailing lists it carries (an option implemented by some mailing list servers for the convenience of legitimate users), and then send the spam to the mailing list's address, leaving the server to do the hard work of forwarding a copy to each subscribed email address. [I know spammers use this trick from bad experience - some spammer used this trick on the list server of the company for which I work, easily covering most of the employees, including employees working well under a month and whose email addresses would be hard to find in other ways.] From web pages. Spammers have programs which spider through web pages, looking for email addresses, e.g. email addresses contained in mailto: HTML tags [those you can click on and get a mail window opened] Some spammers even target their mail based on web pages. I've discovered a web page of mine appeared in Yahoo as some spammer harvested email addresses from each new page appearing in Yahoo and sent me a spam regarding that web page. A widely used technique to fight this technique is the 'poison' CGI script. The script creates a page with several bogus email addresses and a link to itself. Spammers' software visiting the page would harvest the bogus email addresses and follow up the link, entering an infinite loop polluting their lists with bogus email addresses. From various web and paper forms. Some sites request various details via forms, e.g. guest books & registrations forms. Spammers can get email addresses from those either because the form becomes available on the world wide web, or because the site sells / gives the emails list to others. Some companies would sell / give email lists filled in on paper forms, e.g. organizers of conventions would make a list of participants' email addresses, and sell it when it's no longer needed. Some spammers would actually type E-mail addresses from printed material, e.g. professional directories & conference proceedings. Domain name registration forms are a favourite as well - addresses are most usually correct and updated, and people read the emails sent to them expecting important messages.
Check your email address
What is the email address for documentary film make Leon Gast?
Use your proffesional email address and make sure it's apporiate.
A chipmunk cannot possibly have an email address. This is because a chipmunk is an animal and not a human being. Therefore, they cannot access the Internet to make an email address.
Those spammers use software that makes the 'From' address the same as the 'To' email address, automatically, for all of the tens of thousands of emails they send out daily. That's common. A lot of spammers spoof (fake) the "From" address to make it appear as if it's from your own email address. It really isn't from your address though, as you can verify if you read the information in the email headers. You won't find it in your 'Sent' folder either. Presumably, they think you'll be more likely to open it out of curiosity if it looks as if it's 'from' your own address. Delete it without opening it, unless you've recently sent yourself email from that same address, which isn't necessary at all. If you must send yourself email reminders or whatever, use 2 or more email addresses and send yourself emails from one to the other. Solution: Filter out emails from your own email address. The specific way to set up such a filter depends on which email client or webmail service you use. There are too many email clients and webmail services to give specific filtering instructions for here. However, it's not hard to figure out how to do that. Helpful Ideas: A.) For my webmail accounts I set a filtering rule like: If 'From' = 'me@myaddress.com', Then Send to 'Trash'. B.) For my POP email accounts I use the free "Email Remover" program to delete all spam directly from the server, before opening my email client program. But my email client isn't set to check automatically for new emails. C.) Use 'Postini' or a similar service to filter out emails 'from' your own email address, as well as to filter out almost all other spam.
You can make an email account on:yahooaolgooglemsnmailAll of these are dot com URLs.