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Open thread: Favorite spam blocker service?

I've been relatively fortunate with filtering spam over the past couple years (knock on wood). But despite a kickass three-tiered system that includes the world-beating server-side Sieve, plus Mail.app's pretty good client filtering, it's inevitable that even my best-loved private email addresses would find their way into the wrong hands (it's why I recently created "ThanksNo.com" -- an experiment in social re-engineering that you are free to use as well).

So, now that the spelling-impaired Lords of The Dark Side have such renewed interest in my investment options and genital proportions, I'm considering joining a service like Spam Arrest or the apparently deceased Knowspam. I mostly plan to run this on the addresses I use for strictly personal stuff, so I'm satisfied I can start with a "whitelist" to ensure I don't generate loops or dead ends for the "good" senders. But, you tell me...

Apart from running smart filters on your server and in your mail client, what's the best way to protect a mydomain.com-type email address from becoming compromised and punked-out? What are the dangers and cons of using a challenge/response service like Spam Arrest? Apart from abandoning it wholesale, what's the most effective and non-annoying way to rehabilitate a compromised address?

TOPICS: Email, Vox Populi
masukomi's picture

One of the non-obvious issues...

One of the non-obvious issues with challenge response systems is that the companies that provide them as a service make them too much work to respond to for simple messages. I've dropped a few notes to people about problems with their web site, or other simple notes to give them a heads up on something only to be hit with a challenge that first makes me go to a web page, then makes me solve some problem to decide if i'm human or not, and really it's just not worth my time or effort to jump through those hurdles.

The following link is more for programmers but the executive summary at the top provides a great checklist for use when evaluating challenge response systems.

 
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