Forwarding
Email
We all get them....in
the form of jokes, announcements, etc. Every time you forward an
email there is information left over from the people who got the
message before you, namely their email addresses and names. As the
messages get forwarded along, the list of addresses builds, and
builds, and builds, and all it takes is for ONE person on the list
of recipients to get a virus.
Hackers and spammers write virus programs that use
other people's computers - and therefore other people's email addresses
- to send out spam. That way, the spammers' addresses do not appear
in the FROM field. Instead, the FROM field address is that of the
infected computer. They are using someone else's machine to SEND
their spam out. - and their spam email can get sent to every email
address that has come across the infected computer. To the other
people on your list - or to YOU - it appears as if the email came
FROM the infected machine - because it DID come form that machine.
Because of that, it will get through Spam and/or Junk Mail filters
more easily. If yours is the infected machine that is sending the
spam and/or infected email out (and you don't even know it while
it is happening) you may receive "undeliverable message' notices
back even though you did not knowingly originate the email in the
first place. The more computers your email address gets sent to
in the TO: and Cc: fields, the more chances there are for spam and
virus infection to you and to everyone else on the list.
Another use of email addresses is that someone can
take all of the accumulated addresses and sell them or send junk
mail to them from another machine - without using a virus sending
program - possibly in the hopes that a large number of people will
go to a particular site so that they can make a few cents for every
hit. That's right, all of that inconvenience over a few cents! How
do you stop it? Well, there are a couple of easy steps:
(1) When you
forward an email, DELETE
all of the other addresses that appear in the body of the message
(at the top). That's right, DELETE them. Highlight them and delete
them, backspace them, cut them, whatever it is you know how to do.
It only takes a second. (You MUST of course click the "Forward"
button first and then you will have full editing capabilities against
the body and headers of the message. If you don't click on "Forward"
first, you won't be able to edit the message at all.)
(2)
Whenever you Send or Forward an email to more than one person, instead
of using the TO: or CC: fields for adding email address, use the
Bcc (blind carbon copy) field for listing the email
addresses. (Unless you are sending/replying to a small 'select group'
in a 'conference mode' and wish to have replies visible to everyone.)
By using the BCC: (blind carbon copy) method for listing the email
addresses, the people to whom you send will only see their own email
address and you will not be sending everyone's email address out
to everyone else.
If you do not see your BCC: address field, click on HELP and search
for how your email program will display BCC.
If you use some older Outlook versions: go to the
View menu option and check the BCC Field menu option.
If you use Word in Outlook (this applies to versions
of Outlook that come with XP and Vista): click the 'Options' menu
(found on the same menu bar as your 'Send' button and click 'Bcc'.
From then on, the Bcc.. field will show up when you click 'New'
email or 'Reply' (or Reply All).
Another alternative to show the Bcc field is to
click TO: and start typing in the Bcc field of the 'Select Names'
dialog. When you send to BCC: your message will automatically say
"Undisclosed Recipients" in the "TO:" field
of the people who receive it. (Unless there is one more addresees
in that field also.
(3) Remove any "FW:" in the subject line.
You can re-name the subject if you wish or even correct spelling.
(4) ALWAYS hit your Forward button from the actual
email your reading. That will prevent sending out those emails that
the recipient(s) have to open 2 or more pages just to read the one
page with the information on it. By Forwarding from the actual page
you wish someone to view, you stop them from having to open many
emails just to see what you sent. If you don't have a Forward Option
when viewing the original message, then highlight the body of the
message and copy and paste it over to a new email.
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