Spam has been with us ever since the developers of electronic messaging clients became millionaires, and that was about the time the world wide web started reviving utmost attention from the governments, businesses, and the general public of the world. Up until now, it is still a problem that has yet to be resolved with appropriate solutions. In preventing spam, we are given a lot of options, but most of these tips and tricks do not even functionally prevent spam, let alone reduce it! No, I'm afraid the manufacturers and developers of
high-tech electronic devices could devise a gadget to prevent spam.
So you're thinking the web developers and designers of those crafty internet sites know the ins and outs of spam, and they don't get the problem more than ordinary web viewers like us do, right? Or, maybe you're thinking spam isn't even being considered as a problem by those web publishers, better known in the world of cyberspace as webmasters. Much of what you think is crap, and it is basically untrue.
No, webmasters do not come even remotely close to being the masters of the internet universe. They, too, have
spam problems plaguing their everyday electronic mailing ventures. So, here's a tip I think would not only reduce spam from the inboxes of your electronic messaging client accounts, but could even reduce the spam you already have piling up in your inboxes. The thing here is to encrypt the electronic mailing address you have on your internet site using ASCII. Now, this would prevent those harvesters access to your electronic mailing address, thus reducing your spam problems in the process. If you don't already have spam problems, then this tip would prevent you from having it!
Most of my time (an approximate 12 hours a day, actually) is spent in front of my computer doing blogs like this one, checking my emails (and ridding it of annoying spam mails), surfing, and chatting with friends. Chatting is especially useful when I try
Tracked: Sep 03, 15:06