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Spam, like ubiquitous 3rd class mail and telephone solicitors, is a tedious reality of the current advertising climate and is not going away any time soon. Internet-wide the volume of spam has increased over 200% in the last year alone and will continue to grow until anti-spam laws are passed that have some real teeth in them. In the meantime, WEN and its users must take steps to avoid spam.Please note that WEN does not sell or share contact information with other companies; see our privacy policy. So, how can posting something on WEN result in spam to your mail box? Marketers send email harvesting programs and other "bad 'bots" daily to crawl active, public sites, recording what they find and selling this information to advertisers. If your email address is posted in HTML format, they will see it.What is WEN doing about this? Our database takes a big step towards blocking spammers and leeches from our site. Our business directory, calendar and classified ads employ "WEN Mail", a server-based program that works with our database to conceal email addresses from senders, harvesters and bad 'bots. However our message boards, which are remotely hosted by Boardhost and are not part of WEN 's database system, do not employ WEN mail.What can you, the user, do about spam? The answer is quite a lot. There are many spam-filtering services available on the net. Many ISP's such as Earthlink and AOL offer in-house email filtering; other companies on the 'net offer filtered email forwarding to owners of POP3 email addresses. Free email providers such as Hotmail typically provide spam filters. Client-side email management programs like Microsoft Outlook allow users to implement spam filters on their computers that detect and move or delete spam as it's downloaded. You can eliminate up to 95% of spam from your in-box using these easily available tools.
We recommend the following tips to help cut down on spam:
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