What I have done, though, is set my address to contain HTML entities. I don't see any reason why spammers could possibly be fooled by that trick now, but still.
Feh.
I did a test on that some months ago after someone brought that idea up again in one of the other lists.
Test addresses were built with various portions encoded, including one which even had the "mailto:" part encoded.
Guess what? They all received spam. They all received the same spam. Granted, not as much as an address in plain text on the same page, but close enough to prove to me that it wasn't worth the effort.
-- Bill Christensen http://greenbuilder.com/contact/
Green Building Professionals Directory: http://directory.greenbuilder.com Sustainable Building Calendar: http://www.greenbuilder.com/calendar/ Green Real Estate: http://www.greenbuilder.com/realestate/ Straw Bale Registry: http://sbregistry.greenbuilder.com/ Books/videos/software: http://bookstore.greenbuilder.com/
############################################################# This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the INDEX mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
