Protect Yourself and Report the Latest Frauds, Scams, Spams, Fakes, Identify Theft Hacks and Hoaxes
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Do you receive lots of junk email messages from people you don't know? Offensive porn? Lottery scams? Junk pushing "male enhancement", deliberately misspelled so your spam filters won't catch them?
There is a way to stop the spam and it won't cost you a penny. Here's how, in 6 easy steps:
Aside from your closest and most trustworthy,
computer friends and family; Keep this email
secret!!!!
Now, you will find that your new secret email address will be spam-free! So will your second email address, although since you use this for more public sources and less intelligent friends; from their sloppy habits and virus-ridden computers will eventually harvest your second email address and pass it on to the scammers.
Here's the real secret: there are many ways that spammers obtain your email address, but it is most commonly from malware on clueless friend's computers, that harvest every email address in their Outlook address book. That's why you must never tell them your secret email address!
When your second email address starts getting spam, just change it again.
Eventually even your first email address (the secret one) will be discovered by the spammers. When that happens, just change it again - remember Yahoo and Gmail will give you as many email addresses as you want. And one last secret - the spam filters that Gmail and Yahoo use are better than anything in Outlook!
If you use Microsoft Outlook, or any other email program (aka, email client) that allows you to create your own filters, you can easily block most spam easily. Our studies show that 95% of all spam actually comes from less than a dozen sources. Of course, the spammers change website domains and domain extensions periodically, so this list is s snapshot from late 2014. But the point is, create a spam filter that blocks these whenever they appear in a message header, and you will block 95% of all spam.
The first 4 are domain extensions. Almost no person and no reputable company you know uses these. The others are spam generating websites; real or spoofed, it doesn't matter, these are the domains that appear in the spam.
The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a FTC Fraud Reporting or to get free information on consumer issues, visit www.ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft, and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel, a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.