Some you probably already know - but still a good reminder! If we all try
to follow these tips, we can reduce those unwanted messages that come into
our mailboxes. Save this message for future reference.
Do you really know how to forward emails? Do you wonder why you get viruses
or junk mail? Don't you just hate it? Every time you forward
an email there is information left over from the people who received the
message before you did, namely their email addresses and names. As the
messages get forwarded along, the list of addresses builds, and all it takes
is for one person to get a virus, and his computer can send
that virus to every email address that has come across his computer. Or, someone
can take all of those addresses and sell them or send junk mail to them in
the hopes that you will go to the site and he will make five cents for each
hit. That's right, all of that inconvenience over a nickel! How do you
stop it? Well, there are several easy steps. Try the following
if you haven't done it before.
CLEANING UP AN EMAIL TO BE FORWARDED
Start by clicking FORWARD while the email is open:
1. START WITH THE ORIGINAL: Ever get those emails that you have to open 10 pages to read the one page with the information on it? By Forwarding the original text you wish someone to view, you stop them from having to open so many emails just to see what you sent. You may have had to open numerous other pages before you got to the real forwarded message or you may found numerous versions of the same text repeated, ad infinitum, down the page. So EDIT! Either delete all but one instance of the “story” or, if the story is in an email attachment (that may be in an email attachment in an email attachment), open the deepest email attachment, then click FORWARD and send that to friends. Then delete the original email (you’ll still have the one you just forwarded as your own reference and it will be in your SENT folder)PETITIONS:
2. REMOVE OLD ADDRESSES FOR CLEANLINESS AND SECURITY: When you forward an email, DELETE all of the other addresses that appear in the body of the message (at the top of each previous mailing of the message, going on, ad infinitum, down the page). Since, in step 1 above, you deleted all the prior iterations of the same message, you only have to do this part once. Also, delete the advertisements at the bottoms of emails.
3. HIDE RECIPIENTS’ ADDRESSES: Whenever you send an email to more than one person, do not use the TO: or CC: fields for adding email addresses unless they are all people who know each other and you want them all to know who else got the email. Generally, though, it’s much better to use the BCC:(blind carbon copy) field for listing ALL the email addresses. This way, the people you send to will not see other recipients’ email addresses. If you don't see your BCC: go to your HELP menu and search for BCC – some programs like Outlook may hide this field and you’ll only see TO: and CC: but you can tell the program to show it.
4. CLEAN UP YOUR SUBJECT! Remove any ”FW:” in the subject line. You can re-name the subject if you wish or even fix spelling. In essence: edit the SUBJECT line to be as if this is a brand new email. Nobody needs to know it was forwarded and it’s less confusing without all those FW’s.
5. IF THERE ARE ATTACHMENTS:
- see if they are duplicates. If so, delete all but one. You’ll reduce the download time for folks with slow internet and you won’t contribute to some people’s Inboxes go over their quotas.
- People often send around videos and other files that are 5MB or bigger and yet the same video can be found on YouTube, etc. If the attachments in your email are bigger than 100kB or so (bigger than a medium sized picture) see if you can find it on the web: if the name of the attachment is (e.g.) aBigHonkinVideo.wmv go to Google et al and search for that name and chances are you will find it online. Sending the URL takes up a couple of Bytes – sending the whole video takes millions of Bytes.
- Don’t forward files ending in .EXE or .COM Even MS Word and MS Excel files could be infected so only forward if you are SURE it’s clean and if you’ve scanned it first.
The completed petition is actually worth a couple of bucks to a professional spammer because of the wealth of valid names and email addresses contained therein. Do not ever put your email address on any petition.
If you want to support the petition, send it as your own personal letter to the intended recipient. Your position may carry more weight as a personal letter than a laundry list of names and e-mail addresses on a petition. And don't believe the stories that say that the email is being tracked. However, keep in mind that most e-mail petitions that are forwarded with just a list of names are worthless because they do not fully identify the signer by street address, etc. An email does does not prove that the signer really signed it (it can be easily edited as we’re learning here).
Some of the other emails to delete and not forward are:
A. The ones that say something like, 'Send this email to 10 people and you'll see something great happen.'or look it up using a good search engine like Google or Yahoo before forwarding. Most of them are messages that have been circling the net for YEARS!
B. And don't let the “bad luck” ones scare you either. Please do us all a favor and trash them.
C. Before you forward an 'Amber Alert', or a 'Virus Alert', etc, check it out at
www.snopes.com
urbanlegends.about.com
www.truthorfiction.com
Point C above is important. Once an email intended to be passed around gets
into “the wild” it’s out of control forever. It’s out
of your control because people can edit it and change your intended message.
It’s out of control because if the status of the subject changes over
time, the email cannot be changed to reflect this or even be withdrawn. It’s
like those africanized bees that were accidentally released the year I was
born, 1955, in South America. They are taking over european apian colonies
and cannot be stopped. The best thing to do is to post your message on a web
site, blog, etc. Anyplace public, on the Internet, that you have control of.
Then just send the URL to that document to people. If your campaign to eradicate
Glovner’s Disease becomes moot because it truly becomes eradicated, you
can change the text of the web page thanking people for their contributions.
An email asking for donations won’t continue around the internet for
ever and ever. And, as mentioned, a URL takes up a couple of bytes while that
long article may take up thousands multiplied by every person who gets it times
all the people THEY send it to, etc. As an example, I’ve posted the content
of this email on my own web site. All you really need to do is to forward
http://web.TheIdealist.net/consumer/emails.html
to your friends and not the actual text.
Finally, posting the original online means that it won’t lose its formatting
as it gets forwarded each time, eventually becoming a shredded, unreadable,
mess.
Last Updated April 7, 2009
(c) 2009