Ask HN: Strategies for Dealing with Email Spam?
I've been receiving junk mail recently at an incredible rate. Outlook had some trouble filtering them out at first, but it seems like it's finally caught on. Unfortunately, I still feel like I can't avoid looking through the junk folder though because I'll inevitably miss something I need that gets thrown in there.
What strategies do you have for dealing with spam? Aliases and filtering rules? Are particular providers better at dealing with it? Do I just dump this address for a new one?
3 comments
[ 6.7 ms ] story [ 19.2 ms ] threadFor the sites that are not technically spam because I signed up for them, I have rules that move their emails to a folder and mark them as read. One can set retention of each folder. So if I realize I might have needed to view one of the emails, I can look for it but if I don't then it eventually goes away without bothering me.
I traveled over the summer and relied heavily on free WiFi, which meant me signing up and giving them my email. I knew that I was going to be bombarded with spam, so I created the junk account to handle all of it.
1. a very old Yahoo address which I never care about unless I need to validate a sign up - a swamp of spam
2. a Gmail address I use for companies I buy from regularly - sadly now badly spammed
3. a Gmail address I use for money/banks and health only - not spammed yet
4. an account on my domain used by friends and family - spammed rarely
5. a Gmail account I use to consolidate the above (including spam) except #1 and where I read mail. By accidentally using it as a "from" in replies I do get some direct emails and a little direct spam.
Theory and practice turn out to be different.