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Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Email Etiquette: >>>>>>>>> Forwards!
Email Etiquette is a series of blog posts that was nearly titled "Things you've tried to tell your family a million times, and have gotten tired of repeating." Have an email pet peeve that you'd like to see in a future blog post? Send an email to pobox@pobox.com or leave a comment!
All of us are on someone's forward list. You know who it is: when you see their email address in your Inbox, you groan immediately, then page down through their forwarded headers, to see the latest in personal security warnings, luck chains, bad jokes, and dire news about the new tax on email.
Are you a forwarder? Here are some rules of the road to consider when forwarding messages to friends and family:
Pobox is now on Twitter! Follow us for announcements of service problems, fun email links, and other cool stuff I feel like posting.
All of us are on someone's forward list. You know who it is: when you see their email address in your Inbox, you groan immediately, then page down through their forwarded headers, to see the latest in personal security warnings, luck chains, bad jokes, and dire news about the new tax on email.
Are you a forwarder? Here are some rules of the road to consider when forwarding messages to friends and family:
- Check snopes.com first. Snopes is a rumor debunker, and usually, a quick search of their database will let you know if you're passing on true or false information. (One of my favorite recent forwards actually included the Snopes link in it, identifying the rumor as "a mixture of real virus warning and hoax.")
- BCC is a forwarder's best friend. BCC hides the email address of all your recipients, which prevents them from getting mail from your correspondents (and also reduces the chance that they'll get spam from someone who has an infected PC further down the forward chain.) If you have not yet had someone on your list accidentally reply to everyone on your message with, "Great to hear from you! Want to have dinner next week?", you will soon enough.
- Be diligent. You're essentially running a mailing list that people can't subscribe from. So, keep an ear out, and swiftly remove people who like to tease you about your forwards, or who just flat out say they don't appreciate them. Or, get a mailing list! Google Groups and Yahoo Groups have free options that are appropriate for most families. If you send regular messages to a larger group, you may want to consider a paid list with our sister service, Listbox.com.
Pobox is now on Twitter! Follow us for announcements of service problems, fun email links, and other cool stuff I feel like posting.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Spammers and Viruses and Worms, oh my!
Email worms hit the news again recently with Inauguration and Valentine's Day themed lures. Worms are a particular type of virus, designed to take control of your computer to send more spam. Because the virus sends more spam, they can spread very quickly, and generate a huge amount of email.
Pobox spam protection uses many, many blacklists to help protect you from spam, but for viruses and worm, we turn to Cloudmark. Cloudmark is terrific at catching all types of spam, but their virus identification is excellent, too. Because of the huge numbers of reports they get (both from automated sources and people like you), they identify viruses, phishing attempts and other types of malicious messages just as effectively as they pick up spam.
If you use Pobox webmail, messages marked as spam are automatically submitted to Cloudmark for addition to their spam filters. So, your feedback not only helps your future spam filtering, but the filtering of people worldwide!
Email Tip: For those of you who read your email on multiple devices, the Unclutterer had a great post this week on getting your email under control.
Pobox spam protection uses many, many blacklists to help protect you from spam, but for viruses and worm, we turn to Cloudmark. Cloudmark is terrific at catching all types of spam, but their virus identification is excellent, too. Because of the huge numbers of reports they get (both from automated sources and people like you), they identify viruses, phishing attempts and other types of malicious messages just as effectively as they pick up spam.
If you use Pobox webmail, messages marked as spam are automatically submitted to Cloudmark for addition to their spam filters. So, your feedback not only helps your future spam filtering, but the filtering of people worldwide!
Email Tip: For those of you who read your email on multiple devices, the Unclutterer had a great post this week on getting your email under control.
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