Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Brits get 400 spam messages a month

Added:
Nov 18, 2008

The average Brit receives over 10 spam messages a day (372 per month) by either email or text according to a new survey.

The study, from price comparison website moneysupermarket, indicates that despite being spammed every day, the survey reveals nine out of 10 (90 per cent) adults do not protect themselves against spam by automatically filtering their emails. This leaves them open to potentially dangerous messages.

 

81 per cent say the spam messages they receive are a nuisance, with the most common types of spam messages being sales (35 per cent), phishing (27 per cent) and pornography (16 per cent).

 

Although spam is widely seen as a nuisance, one in seven (14 per cent) people admit to acting on, or replying to, a spam message. The under-twenties seem to be the worst offenders with nearly a fifth (17 per cent) admitting to acting on spam.

 

James Parker, commercial manager of mobiles and broadband at moneysupermarket.com, says: “With the internet and mobile phones playing such an integral part in everyday life, the opportunity for spammers to attack is huge. I’m really surprised just 10 per cent of people use an automatic spam filter. Most email providers offer this for free and when you consider spam emails can contain viruses that will steal your private information; the need for security is paramount.”

 

The survey also reveals over a quarter (26 per cent) of people think spam is a danger to young people in particular and a further quarter (23 per cent) think their email account provider should do more to warn of the dangers of spam – especially when a fifth (20 per cent) of people that receive spam have no idea how to stop it.

 

moneysupermarket.com top tips to stay spam free:

 

1.     Make sure you use any automatic spam filters/pop up blockers that your email provider may supply

2.     Keep spyware and anti-virus software up to date

3.     Do not open emails or attachments from addresses you do not recognise

4.     Be wary of downloading applications from sites such as facebook, they can often be malware

5.     If you receive an email from a prince asking you for money in return for a lot more money it is too good to be true – avoid like the plague

 

The online poll was carried out by Opinium Research, who interviewed 2,179 British adults between 17th and 21st October 2008. Research has been weighted to nationally representative criteria

 

Document Actions
Subscribe to Netimperative Newsletters

Email address:


Daily
Weekly
Search Marketing
Events
Publishing & Media

Send as:
Text
HTML

Alternatively, click here to unsubscribe

Digital Training Academy
Digital Training Academy
Essential skills for today's marketers: boost your team's results with customised advanced digital marketing coaching from world class trainers at the Academy.
Mail our academy managers Ask our tutors for more
Full details here...
Digital marketing audits
Digital Training Academy

Getting the best ROI from your websites, emails and online ads? Sure?

Our digital marketing audits review your current and planned campaigns to find ways of cutting budgets without cutting impacts.

Mail our academy managers Ask for more
Full details here...
 
Digital events
Latest polls
Mobile ad networks
Apple's iAds Vs Google's AdMob- which do you think will be most succesful in the long term?



Votes : 114
Comment
Right to reply: The New Twitter – a sticky, revenue-rich service that blitzes the third-party apps
Twitter is now a 'destination website' and that means it is gunning for Facebook, but cleverly avoiding a direct dogfight. It’s more an information network than a social network and so is offering much, much more. Tanya Goodin, CEO of search and social conversion agency Tamar comments…
Sep 16, 2010
Right to reply: ‘Instant Search’– Google giveth then taketh away
Google has just announced its “streaming search” service, Google Instant, is coming out of limited Beta testing and going live for all users. According to Adam Bunn, Head of Search at leading independent search and social marketing agency Greenlight, when it comes to search engine optimisation campaigns (SEO), some websites may now suffer a drop in traffic.
Sep 10, 2010
Guest comment: No rival to the SMS text exists in the market today
SMS is the obvious “lowest common denominator” mobile marketing solution... yet critics still talk about apps and website and vouchers. Darren Daws, Managing Director at Txtlocal argues why SMS is still the best mobile marketing medium, even on smartphones.
Aug 04, 2010
All subject items…