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Spam and Anti-spam
Spam is unwanted junk e-mail, usually sent in bulk, that
is deceptive, annoying and/or offensive. Fortunately, anti-spam
measures are available at both the university level, to identify and filter spam
before it lands in users' mailboxes, and at the user level, to eliminate the
spam that gets through.*
Here's what Ohio State is doing to filter spam
and the options it provides so that individual users can eliminate even more
junk mail.
- Ohio State runs a preliminary scan
of e-mail on the central system to eradicate dangerous viruses, mail bombs, and some
junk mail for osu.edu addresses.
- In addition to the preliminary scan, Ohio State also
provides an anti-spam defense on the central e-mail system
that members of the university community may adjust to their preferred filtering level.
- The central anti-spam defense with a simplified interface is automatically turned on
for the following groups: undergraduate, graduate, and professional
students and users of the Lifetime E-mail Forwarding Service
(LEFS), which is offered by University Development and the Alumni Association.
- Faculty and staff may voluntarily activate the central anti-spam defense.
- The new, simplified interface enables users of the central
anti-spam defense to adjust the level of e-mail filtering from the default
setting of medium to either high or low
filtering.
- All new users of anti-spam service see the simplified interface.
Those who activated the anti-spam defense prior to the addition of this enhancement continue
to see the original interface, but may opt for the simplified interface
by resetting the Preferences in the anti-spam software.
- More information, including the importance of using anti-spam, making
filtering adjustments, and adjusting preferences, is available in the
8help Knowledge Base article.
- New users of the anti-spam defense are encouraged to read the
8help Knowledge Base article
before logging on to the service at antispam.osu.edu
with their OSU Internet Username and password.
Those who want more spam filtering options
can take these additional steps.
- Use the built-in junk mail filtering in your e-mail program.
These options include discarding all mail not sent directly to your address and using
formulas to assign a percentage rating to determine whether a message is spam.
- Use your e-mail program's filters (also known as rules) to perform some
basic checks if it doesn't have automatic junk mail filtering. For example,
you can set it up to move all mail not sent directly to your e-mail address into another
folder. You can have it move e-mail from
specific sender addresses, or messages with offensive words or phrases, directly into the trash
or into a junk mail folder for sorting at a later time. The 8help Knowledge Base article on
filtering
provides instructions on setting up filters in common e-mail software.
- Use a third-party spam filtering add-in program with your
regular e-mail program. Some work like plugins and coordinate with your
e-mail program, while others
run as separate programs to filter spam from your mailbox before
accessing your messages normally. To learn more
about these programs, search on spam filtering in the 8help
knowledge base or search on the web.
- Be alert to the possibility of your e-mail address
being harvested on the Internet. Whenever you're online,
you run the risk of having your e-mail address "harvested"
by opportunists who use specialized software to collect e-mail addresses, which they
use for their own purposes or sell to other spammers. Your e-mail address
may be picked up whenever you post to mailing lists, chat rooms, or newsgroups,
add your e-mail address to a database directory, or register for products online.
- To avoid becoming part of spammer lists, observe the following:
- Be careful how you post to mailing lists, chat rooms, or newsgroups.
Posting (not subscribing) makes your address vulnerable and available for harvesting.
If you don't mind possibly receiving spam mail, post anyway. But
if you do mind, use personal e-mail to correspond directly with the
person to whom you are responding. For chat rooms or newsgroups, you
can also correspond directly with one of the frequent posters, or with
the moderator, if there is one.
- To obstruct automated harvesting tools, disguise e-mail addresses in plain text by
replacing the characters with human-readable equivalents, e.g., showing
“myname@domain.com” as “myname at domain dot com.”
- Don't add your e-mail address
to public databases and directories, such as electronic white pages,
if you don't know how the information will be used.
- Beware of sites that let you register to request not to get spam;
some of them actually exist to collect e-mail addresses for spam purposes.
- When you receive spam, never respond to spammers directly or reply
to e-mail addresses listed in a spam e-mail, because you'll be giving them a valid address
to add to their list.
- Be careful in giving out your e-mail address when
signing up for products or online services; frequently these services
add you to their own mailing lists and sometimes they will pass on or sell collected e-mail
addresses to spammers.
- Avoid putting your e-mail address on public pages,
or in member profiles for Internet services.
To report spam, you have to identify the originating site
in the headers. You can usually assume that the "From" address
in spam e-mail is fake; most spammers are good at disguising their return
address and adding additional bogus addresses in the header to make it
hard to figure out unless you're a system administrator. Your e-mail
software should have a command to display full headers.
If you don't know how to show the full Internet headers
in your e-mail program, refer
to the 8help article on full headers
to get instructions for your e-mail program and try to determine
where the message actually came from.
Forward the entire message with the complete
header information along with your complaint to the postmaster at the originating system.
The address is in the form: postmaster@full-domain-name.
Find more help about complaining to a spammer's provider on the
spam.abuse.net site.
Refer to Ohio State's
Policy on Responsible Use of
University Computing Resources and the associated
FAQ
to better understand the university's position on spam.
OSU e-mail users are urged to contact OIT to help assess the appropriateness
of any unsolicited bulk e-mail they want to send. To request assistance,
send e-mail to 8help or call 688-HELP.
*Note: As with
any filtering technology, there is a risk of losing wanted e-mail and a
possibility that some spam will get through both filtering levels.
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Quick Tips
Learn about Ohio State's anti-spam service on the central e-mail
system and find out how to make it work best for you. Refer to the
8help Knowledge Base article.
Do not add your e-mail address to public databases and
directories
Don’t ever respond to spammers directly;
you’ll be giving them a valid address to add to their list
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