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STANFORD UNIVERSITY

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVICES

Anti-Spam

Overview

Spam is probably the single most annoying artifact of the Internet's success. If you have email, you've probably received spam. Both the amount of spam and the number of complaints about it have increased to such a level that, were it not to take action, many of Stanford's core email services would no longer be usable.

Your Anti-Spam Options

Stanford offers three main weapons in the battle against spam:

Anti-Spam Filter
This system identifies incoming spam and tags it. The other two options — the Spam Deletion and Filtering Tool and email program filtering — can't work without it. See the Anti-Spam Filter page to learn how the system determines what qualifies as spam and what does not. It will help you understand how best to use the other options.
email.stanford.edu/antispam/spamfilter.html
Spam Deletion and Filtering Tool
This is the most effective way to kill spam. The Spam Deletion and Filtering Tool catches and discards spam before it enters your Inbox. It's quick and easy to use.
tools.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/delete-spam
Email filtering instructions
These instructions tell you how to configure your email program so that it shunts spam headed for your Inbox into a "Trash," "Antispam," or "Junk" folder instead.
email.stanford.edu/antispam/emailfilter.html

Future of Anti-Spam Efforts

Spam-filtering is a complex and tricky business. Legitimate email can be marked as spam while obvious spam gets through. The spammers continue to refine their approaches in order to avoid detection filtering. So far, no spam-filtering product can claim to eliminate 100% of all spam. In fact, success rates in the 40-60 percent range seem to be the best that have been achieved so far.

Stanford and Spam Blacklists

Sometimes the cure for spam can be worse than the problem; email blacklists are an example. Once in a while Stanford's email gateways get placed on an Internet spam blacklist. When this happens, email sent from Stanford mail servers gets bounced back to its sender, even when the message is perfectly legitimate (non-spam) email. Why does this happen? Can Stanford do anything about it? The Blacklists page provides information that sheds some light on the topic:

Last modified Monday, 14-Jan-2008 11:25:19 AM

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