On Mar 31, 12:53=A0pm, spamb...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Doug Miller) wrote:
> In article <sqa2v3ptgo8guo8giku83r7ua13gejg...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, Arch
<send...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> >It's better to light one candle than to curse the darkness.
>
> And likewise better to simply ignore spam than to complain about it.
You are forgetting about the monkey-see, monkey-do aspect of spam.
For the headhunter spam, pointing out their mispost does work at
times, and I have personally seen it work when it is pointed out that
not only they but others are called on it. For the linkspam, well,
there's a human there somewhere, whether they can be contacted is less
than likely. But personally, I have had some success, especially the
ones where some author has been ripped off and this is pointed out to
google and the author. I speculate some of that is faddish, and will
come and go as people try to game online ads and discover it doesn't
work after a while.
Ignoring it is accepting it and helps propagate it. That's the
experience of people here and some other places, though for sure yet
other places have been wiped out, even with people trying to defend
them. Anyone who's seen the latter on a group they care about is
likely to be very touchy regarding this subject.
The spam you need to ignore is the stuff that is harvesting your email
address and asking you to reply with an unsubscribe.
jg
--
@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
is bogus. So I see this listing on zoominfo.com for Joel
Garry who is an Oracle Enterprise Manager at Oracle Corp. Seems some
bot got a few random parts of my online resume and posted it as part
of a SEO link enhancement along with a bunch of various other random
things. So zoominfo comes along and somehow interprets that as a
person with the job description of a decremented Oracle product. What
a stupid search engine! LOL!


|