Unfortuntely there's not much you can do, other than reporting the sender of the SPAM to your email service provider, and they can block that particular address indefinitely, but you'll still get the others.
Consider yourself lucky that it's going into your bulk folder and not into your main inbox! :p
2006-09-29 03:58:23
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answer #1
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answered by Wim 2
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The bulk folder is where your ISP sends all the spam mail, thats what it's for. You are generally quite safe to ignore it.
Mail in the bulk folder does not usually count towards any mail limits and it tends to get cleared automatically.
You may want to look every now and again just to make sure that mail for you has not been filtered there by mistake, especially if you have requested something from a website.
Do not under any circumstances take the advice of opening mail to get to the unsubscribe option, not unless you want an absolute flood!!
2006-09-29 04:15:06
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answer #2
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answered by Martin14th 4
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Change email address first, creating a new personal one which you give out to only people you actually know. Next create a forum membership email which you only use for public areas.
Spammers trawl forums and websites using web spiders and other software technologies to farm real addresses, using a public and private email address means at least you can keep your important account clean.
I have used 3 Yahoo addresses for about 8 years or so and the only one that ever gets spam is the public one, my business and personal ones have always been spam free.
Unfortunately once your email address is on a spam list, it will stay that way forever. Spammers will even sell your email address to other spammers once they know its a live one, so never reply to spam.
Note: MNS above - never reply to spam, if it has an unsubsribe button within it or even an address to contact UNLESS you see the company is a well known one. Even then its a risk in case the email is spoofed. It just confirms you are a live person and they may use far more nefarious means like sending non-spam looking emails with mal-code in them, fake weblinks that enable exploits etc.
2006-09-29 04:01:26
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answer #3
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answered by The Pirate Captain 3
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The only real way to deal with this problem is to set yourself up a new email address with your ISP and then stop using the old address - notifying friends and family of the new one of course. If you don't want to do this you could use a program called "Mailbox Dispatcher" which I have used on my own email accounts for the last 5 years. The program allows you view the first few lines of each email and allows you to whitelist or blacklist either the sender or the subject, and then to delete them from the server so that you never download them. The program is freeware and has no spyware or advertising and I highly recommend it - helps me deal with all the spam I receive.
2006-09-29 04:46:39
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answer #4
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answered by ragingmk 6
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They in all probability have been given your handle from some else's contacts record, or from you inadvertently traveling an merchandising website. there is not something you're able to do approximately that different than to get a sparkling e mail handle. the majority field is the place the BT unsolicited mail clear out immediately dumps stuff that it thinks is unsolicited mail. what's occurring is this gadget behaving precisely as that's meant to do. that's fairly a sensible little bit of application and detects unsolicited mail emails with the help of particular features inclusive of unusual sender addresses, pornographic concern strains and different much less glaring signs and indications. the reason that suspect emails are positioned into Bulk is so as which you have the possibility to work out them; and if something isn't unsolicited mail you are able to mark it as valid and destiny ones from that handle will bypass right now on your IN field. do by no skill open emails in Bulk till you're unquestionably particular that they are from a source which you realize. All you may do is check out the record of senders as quickly as each week and pull out the (very uncommon) ones which you extremely prefer. Emails in Bulk are immediately deleted after a pair of weeks so as that they are in a position to't build up indefinitely. you are able to delete them manually in case you like to.
2016-10-01 12:08:45
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answer #5
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answered by fritch 4
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Some people say not to do this, but you have to open each one and scroll down to the "Unsubscribe" portion of the e-mail. I used to get about 150-200 a day at least. Some of them are from the same company, so once you unsubscribe from them you knock out a few at a time. Most of them will take 10 to 14 days to get off their list, so be patient.
2006-09-29 03:59:04
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answer #6
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answered by pfc_weiss 5
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Dont hit unsubscribe or click on them in any way.
Most of them will have read receipts or something that can see any activity. As soon as they see this they will see an active email account and email you more. Just leave them in the spam/bulk folder and let it deleted itself every 30 days automatically.
Get a gmail account as they are really good at seperating spam. Let me know if you need an invite
2006-09-29 04:04:14
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answer #7
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answered by Steveo 1
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You can't *stop* it, that's why there is a Bulk folder, so at least it doesn't jam your Inbox. Just empty the Bulk folder every time you check your mail. That's all you can do.
2006-09-29 03:59:17
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answer #8
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answered by anna 7
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Don't worry about it the bulk folder does not count as part of your memory allowance, and will be automatically deleted usually after one month.
2006-09-29 04:01:25
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answer #9
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answered by Crazy Diamond 6
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Always have a "throw-away" account that you can give to businesses that ask for email accounts, such as Yahoo or Hotmail. That way when they sell your email address to spammers, you can just periodically delete the junked up free account and get another one.
2006-09-29 04:00:32
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answer #10
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answered by Clown Knows 7
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