When you get
on a mailing list you don't want to be on, it's easy to get off – just click on
the "unsubscribe" link. But should you? Maybe not. When you unsubscribe, you're giving
the organization that sent you the message information about yourself that you
may not want them to have:
1. You
have confirmed to the sender that your email address is both valid and in
active use.
If the
sender is unscrupulous then the volume of email you receive will most likely go
up, not down. Worse, now that you have validated your address the spammer can
sell it to his friends. So you are probably going to get phishing attacks from
them too.
2. By
responding to the email, you have positively confirmed that you have opened and
read it and may
be slightly interested in the subject matter, whether it’s getting money from a
foreign prince, a penny stock tip or a diet supplement. That’s wonderful
information for the mailer and his pals.
3. If
your response goes back via email - perhaps the process requires you to reply with the
words "unsubscribe," or the unsubscribe link in the message opens up
an email window - then not only have you confirmed that your address is active,
but your return email will leak information about your email software too.
Emails
contain meta information, known as email headers, and you can tell what kind of
email software somebody is using (and imply something about their computer)
from the contents and arrangement of the headers.
4. If
your response opens up a browser window then you’re giving away even more about
yourself. By
visiting the spammer’s website you’re giving them information about your
geographic location (calculated based on your IP address), your computer
operating system and your browser. The
sender can also give you a cookie which means that if you visit any other
websites they own (perhaps by clicking unsubscribe links in other emails)
they’ll be able to identify you personally.
5. The
most scary of all:
if you visit a website owned by a spammer you’re giving them a chance to
install malware on your computer, even if you don’t click anything.
These kinds
of attacks, known as drive-by downloads, can be tailored to use exploits the
spammer knows you are vulnerable to thanks to the information you’ve shared
unwittingly about your operating system and browser.
So how do
you avoid unwanted email without unsubscribing?
If the
message is unsolicited then mark it as spam. Marking
something as spam not only deletes the message (or puts it into your trash) it
also teaches your email software about what you consider spam so that it can
better detect and block nefarious messages in the future and adapt as the
spammers change their tricks.
This not
only helps you, but also everyone else too.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please be considerate of others, and please do not post any comment that has profane language. Please Do Not post Spam. Thank you.