You're not the only one, not by a long shot.

by FOG, Monday, March 04, 2013, 15:55 (4227 days ago) @ SIXGUNNER

I can't stomach either kind of SPAM, but I find the canned variety much easier to avoid completely than the electronic form.

The only 'solution' I have found to the email kind is to use completely separate addresses for what you might call 'business' and 'personal' use.

I think this is especially important if one uses any online payment service such as PayPal for ordering goods over the Internet.

Even so, SPAM can still catch up from time to time, as just recently happened to my 'business' account.

When that happens, about all one can do is 'punt' and start over with a new email account, so that's exactly what I did. For this purpose, I always select a new 'user name' while I'm at it.

When establishing new or separate email accounts, I also think its best to use different services. This ensures that your 'different' messages come from separate domains.

Of course, having more than one or two online accounts of any kind means having to keep track of more user names and passwords than some us − including me − can handle.

The free and reliable answer I found to that problem is a program called KeePass. If you are running a PC, I highly recommend it. In addition to encrypting and storing your logon info on your own computer, KeePass will type it in for you. It will even open the applicable webpage in the browser you select (if you run more than one browser, which I do, also for security purposes).

There are also 'cloud' services for password storage, but to my mind, they all seem rooted in circular reasoning.
I realize all my passwords are kept at the sites where I have one, but the last place I want to store them is on the internet, courtesy of a third party.

Hope this helps. :-)

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