PROVIDENCE, R.I. (Reuters) - I don't need Viagra, my credit is fine, and somehow I doubt the PhD offered via e-mail with "no required tests, classes, books, or interviews!" is going to be worth much. If you're inundated and infuriated by spam, the newly released free version of DigiPortal Software's ChoiceMail may prevent you from going postal.
I've found it does a wonderful job of mopping up the insidious e-mail that gets past most spam filters.
I receive, on average, about 33 pieces of junk mail per day. The spam blocker offered by my Internet provider screens out 75 percent of the messages, but one in four still get through, partly because spammers keep finding ingenious and insidious new ways to get past the filters. One way is by spelling Viagra "V!(at)gra."
ChoiceMail takes a different approach. It uses all the names in your electronic address book to create a "whitelist" of people you probably want to hear from. Messages from them will get through automatically, unless you decide otherwise. If you send e-mail to someone, ChoiceMail automatically adds that address to your whitelist -- another feature that can be turned off, if you wish.
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