What can I do about “junk mail” or SPAM?
You have probably seen an increase in the amount of “junk mail” which shows up in your email box, or on your favorite newsgroups. The activities of a small number of people are becoming a bigger problem for the Internet. Sending unsolicited email is not allowed on NCSU’s network. The computer use policy states:
III. Personal Use
I. The use does not involve sending or soliciting chain letters, nor does it
involve sending unsolicited bulk mail messages (e.g., “junk mail,” or
“spam,” or “MLM.”)
IV. Use of Computing Facilities for Commercial, Advertising, and Broadcast
Purposes
D. University computer account holders may not "broadcast" email messages without
prior approval from a University official with the rank of chancellor, provost,
vice chancellor for finance and business, or their designees. "Broadcast" means
transmission of a message to a significant number of computer accounts on a
University server or servers; the intent is to prevent mass mailings from tying
up employee time and computer resources.
How can I reduce the amount of Spam I get?
In order to reduce the amount of junk mail you get, try following these tips:
1. Never Respond to SPAM
Most spammer include an "unsubscribe" address to allow you to be taken off their
list. In reality, this is just a ploy to check whether the email address that is
being spammed is a live one or not. If you respond, they will sell your address
to every spammer out there, hence increasing the amount of spam you get.
2. Don't post your email address on your web site
While having your email address on your web site is a great idea, most spammers
employ "bots" to harvest email addresses from web pages. These "bots" are
software programs that search web pages for text strings in the form of
something@something.something. When an address is found it adds it to its
database of email addresses.
3. Have a "Public" email address
Get yourself a free "web-based" email account from a provider such as Hotmail
or Yahoo. Use this email address when subscribing to any web sites etc. This
will allow you to keep your "private" account such as your Unity account free
of unwanted mail. Also use this address for posting to newsgroups. Another
trick used when posting to newsgroups is to add a modifier to the address to
fool "bots". A message can be added to the body asking people to remove this
from the address before replying to you. For example joe@isp.com will change
to joe@_removethis_isp.com. You can also substitute full words for the symbols
in your email address like joe_at_isp_dot_com.
4. What does NC State provide to help you manage spam?
* Manages "block" lists for the campus mail relays to stop viruses, mail loops,
bad hosts and spam directed at our entire user installation.
* Periodically scans the network for machines accepting mail and performs third
party (open) relay checks.
* NC State offers PureMessage, a mail filtering agent that attempts to identify
spam using text analysis and Internet-based blac