INSIDE
Ten Email Savers
These DTL email tips can keep you, your computer, and your mailbox
happy. Ignore them at your own peril.
- Ask and Ye Shall Receive.
People get
spammed because they give their address away. If recklessly
disclosing your email address has turned your mailbox into a
rubbish bin, consider starting over with a new address, then heed
the rest of this advice.
- Protect One, Abuse Another.
Maintain one
email address that you defend with your life and share only with
trusted souls. Freely use a second address when shopping online or
signing up for newsletters. Trash your abused address as needed
and get a new one. Free email services are perfect for this.
- Keep it Off the Web.
Never post your
email address on a web site (businesses do this all the time on
contact pages). If you need a contact link, encode it using DTL's
Mailto Encoder
tool.
- Beware of Web Forms.
Many web sites ask
for your email address to access special features. Sometimes an
address is optional. Omit it or enter something bogus. Beware of
pre-checked boxes that opt you into a mailing list.
- Don't Trust Anyone.
Got an attachment
from someone you don't know? Delete it. Got an unexpected
attachment from a friend? Confirm with them first before opening
it.
- Don't Be a Legendary Fool.
That message
your friend sent imploring you to forward it to everyone you know
was an urban legend. Don't
fall for it. It's a great way to look foolish and lose control of
your email address to complete strangers — folks who, if they
become infected with a virus, have you in their address lists. If
you must blast an email to lots of people, put their addresses in
the Bcc field.
- Watch What You Send.
Do not include your
email address in your electronic signature. It can be easily
spread around by others via forwarding. When forwarding a message
from someone else, you can protect their address by removing it
from your message.
- Know the Executable File Extensions . . .
. . . such as .EXE, .COM, .SCR, .BAT, .VBS, and .PIF. If you get
one of these files by email, don't open it. A ZIP archive
containing a file with one of those extensions probably has a
virus. Attachments with dual extensions (like OPENME.PDF.EXE) try
to fake you out. The last extension matters. To see it, use the
Folder Options control panel to uncheck the "Hide extensions for
known file types" item.
- Never Respond To Spam.
If your bank sends
monthly statements you'd rather not receive, it's OK to click the
"Unsubscribe" link. But if you have spam in your mailbox from some
unknown source, don't reply or click on anything in it.
- Stay Up to Date.
Visit Microsoft Update regularly
to apply critical security updates. If you use anti-virus software,
keep it updated (but don't bet your life on it). If you use
Outlook, upgrade to Office 2003 for better security and spam
blocking and make sure to keep it updated,
a step many Office users neglect.
I spend a lot of time helping customers rid their systems of adware
and malicious software. Despite maintaining their Symantec
subscriptions, they still get infected. Yet, in over 15 years of
heavy email usage without any virus software on our computers, my
wife, two teenagers, and I have never been infected. DTL's BlockSmith
system does a good job of rejecting virus-ridden email. But good
education and common sense beats the best software any day.
If you or your company could use mentoring on safe computing
practices, please contact
me.
Showcase: Visual Antics

This month, DTL highlights the web site for
Visual Antics, the
creative partnership of Ann and William Scott. Visual Antics
designed the look of their site but another web firm built it.
After DTL helped move them over to our servers, we found some
problems with it. The home page graphic was over 250K in size
(modem users had to wait over a minute for it to load).
DTL optimized the image, made it look better, and reduced
it to just 65K. Now Visual Antics knows who to turn to
for web antics.
The Most Important Person at DTL...
...is you! Your feedback is extremely valuable. If you have
questions or suggestions on how DTL can help you succeed online,
please contact me.
Sincerely,

Morgan Davis
President, DTL Networx
About DTL Networx
DTL provides design, development, IT, and hosting services for
organizations that demand a higher class of web site production
and management, database administration, Internet operations and
marketing support. It is the second-generation Internet services
company pioneered by Morgan Davis, author of several computer
books and creator of one the first applications to connect
personal computers to the Internet in 1984.
Copyright © 2005 DTL Networx. All Rights Reserved.