Make no mistake, you can be tracked down by the information you leave behind on the internet. For instance if your email address is yourname-and-birthday@yourisp.com (face it LOTS of people include their birthday) and you let this email address out into the wild, say in a comment to a blog post, a chat room, online forum, or even a résumé/job post etc, it can be quite easy to find even more of your personal information. Think about it, many Internet Service Providers only serve a specific geographic location, if you exclude the big guys like SBC (even the big guys have subdivisions that someone might be able to find out about). Someone of nefarious intent can do a simple online search and find out what area your ISP serves. Just like that they have narrowed there search to a specific area. Next they just search for your name in that area. Kinda scary and that’s just from your email address.
Just because someone asks you for information does not mean that you have to give it to them or that it be 100% true. Let me pose this scenario: You meet someone in a club while out of town on business and they are very nice, in fact you spend quite some time having intelligent conversation. Finally when it’s time to go home to your family (let’s say you’re married) and this nice person asks you for your number. The thought of your jealous spouse answering a call from strange man/women you met in a club just isn’t very appealing to you, but you don’t want to reject your new friend either. So you give him/her your cell number, or as happens more than you might think, you give him/her a fake number reasoning that you will most likely never see this person again.
This same strategy works marvelously with those annoying website “sign ups” only without the hurt feelings 2 days later when your new ‘friend’ realizes you gave them a bogus number. Unless I am purchasing a product or service from a website or creating some type of business relationship, I always use a pseudonym (fake name) and an email address from an online provider such as Yahoo or Hotmail. I generally use a real email address that I have set up with one of the online providers so that I can receive the information I requested and because many of these sites have gotten wise to this trick so they only grant you access or allow you to download the requested file after you confirm your email address by clicking a link in an email that the website sends you.
Don’t use your real name. Use a nickname or even a fake one. Do not make your name part of your email address except the one used for real business contacts and friends/family. The same goes for including your birthday or other private information. Remember your email address is seen by anyone you send mail to from that address.
By using a pseudonym and a free email account you not only protect your privacy but you are also creating a buffer from spam. If one of your free email accounts begins to get completely out of hand with spam you can always ‘throw it away’ and create a new one. If you have cultivated any real contacts with your ‘throw away’ account that you wish to keep you can always provide them with your new ‘throw away’ email address.
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