Forum Moderators: open
Thanks.
Go here, fill the simple form. and you get ready to cut and paste code for inclusion in your website. You can also downlowd a tiny and free Java program and run it from your hard drive. (bottom of page)
[hivelogic.com...]
Forms only - But if users wanted a popup window that could give them a .gif image of the email address so that they could use their own email client, they could get it. NO text or anything that could be decoded.
Still I got spam. The only way I could think that they were getting the email addresses was by SE's or directories, and actually adding the addresses to their list by hand - without bots. (In fact, I even mentioned the reasons for doing the form or the .gif image as an anti-spam technique on the site itself). Did not matter. Still got junk mail. But it's a lot less than on other sites that did not have anti-spam techniques.
Only if your user name was something extremely unusual, then you need to suspect human interaction (or a leak at your ISP/hoster).
email address was only incoming, and only listed on the site through a gif image. None of the email addresses were ever used for outoing email.
I suspect that certain sectors are targeted, then searched thru SE's, and email addresses are collected. (by hand)
Also, this was not info@ or webmaster@, or any of the other usuals.
Most of the spam came from one source: Sorry, can't reveal it here because I have already had one post deleted on this issue because I did violate TOS. (Yes, I did violate TOS. I had one post deleted since mar 2001 - and none others edited that I know of - no big deal) The violation was quoting email (that I received) That's the rules; I can't complain - guilty. (I put it in Foo anyway)
The point is that there might be human elements out there collecting email addresses in certain sectors of the economy or internet. We all know that there are markets out there that employ cheap labor. Do we think that our email addresses are immune from this?