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Dealing with Spam

Dealing with Spam. A CyberAngels Tutorial. Contents. Introduction - What is spam? Conclusion Quick Quiz. Learning outcomes. What is spam? How to spot it How to avoid being spammed Dealing with spam Where to go for more help. Introduction. What is spam?

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Dealing with Spam

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  1. Dealing with Spam A CyberAngels Tutorial

  2. Contents • Introduction - What is spam? • Conclusion • Quick Quiz

  3. Learning outcomes • What is spam? • How to spot it • How to avoid being spammed • Dealing with spam • Where to go for more help

  4. Introduction • What is spam? • Unsolicited (you didn’t ask for it) • Unwanted (it is not welcome) • Repeated (you normally get lots of it) • Often from unknown senders • May be offensive or embarrassing • May be a front for crimes like phishing

  5. For instance • A lot of spam focuses around relatively few topics: • Pornography/sexual content • Pharmaceutical products • Offers around making money quickly or generous business deals • Repeated requests from financial institutions for details that verify or update records apparently held (these are often phishing scams) • Supporting a campaign, e.g. a lost child, a sick partner, etc.

  6. Spotting spam • You can often spot spam either by it being very formulaic and/or full of spelling mistakes (often with punctuation characters mid-word) • A lot of spam (but not all) comes from addresses that don’t look like ‘real’ internet addresses - e.g. a random mix of characters • Some viruses make use of address books - so if you start receiving out of the ordinary or unexpected e-mails from someone you do know, this may be the reason

  7. Avoiding spam • Be very careful about who you give your e-mail address out to - both to individuals and to organizations • Look out for privacy/data protection statements offered by organizations • Get a spam-blocker, set it up and activate it to pre-empt incoming spam • Consider using a disposable address

  8. Dealing with spam • Report it - to ISPs, appropriate sites (e.g. those that the spam claims to be from), etc. • Get a spam blocker and set it up properly • Delete and ignore it • For particularly bad cases: • set up a new e-mail address and notify only people you want • Over time, move away from your original e-mail

  9. Quiz 1. Spam is e-mail that is: a. Uninvited b. Unwanted c. Repeated d. All of the above

  10. Answer to Question 1 • The correct answer is d

  11. Quiz 2. If you receive spam you should: a. Delete it b. Reply to it using your e-mail service reply button c. See if you can identify an ‘unsubscribe’ or similar link and use that to try to cancel future mailings d. Follow any forwarding instructions or information requests in the message

  12. Answer to question 2 • The correct answer is a

  13. Quiz 3. What is the best way to manage spam? a. Set up an e-mail signature saying you don’t want spam b. Only share your e-mail address to organizations with robust privacy policies c. Setting up a ‘black list’ which includes prohibiting all inbound e-mail d. Replying to individual spam messages with polite but firm requests to stop mailing

  14. Answer to question 3 • The correct answer is b

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