The Star Malaysia - Star2

The case for multiple e-mails

- By EVA BOLLER

RATheR than using just one e-mail address for all purposes, consumer protection experts say you’re better off with several e-mail addresses and using each one for a specific purpose.

But doesn’t this mean a far larger logistical effort from the user?

“I have to manage the passwords for all e-mail addresses, check the accounts regularly and make sure that I am responding to the correct e-mail address,” says consumer protection advocate Ralf Scherfling.

Ultimately, it comes down to choosing between security and convenienc­e.

If you do have multiple accounts, you can take advantage of the various Inbox folders that most e-mail clients and web-mailers provide. These can pre-sort e-mail, saving you time, says IT expert Thorsten Jekel.

Sometimes you can even specify that e-mails in defined subfolders are automatica­lly deleted after a set number of days. Spam e-mails that don’t automatica­lly end up in the correspond­ing folder should be marked as spam so that the filters can learn.

Then there are disposable addresses which are automatica­lly deactivate­d after a single use or a short period. “This is particular­ly useful if you want to retrieve informatio­n, but don’t want to receive spam e-mails,” Jekel says. These disposable addresses can also be used for one-off registrati­ons.

e-mail addresses typically are also used when signing up to Internet services. But “not every online retailer or forum provider deals with this data carefully”, warns Tim Griese from Germany’s Federal Office for Informatio­n Security (BSI). For that reason it increases your security to use several e-mail addresses rather than just one.

One way to avoid or at least minimise spam is to have an address that’s as rare as possible, Griese advises. even so a certain amount of risk is inevitable. “The more frequently you give out your address, the higher the likelihood that this address will get to spammers,” he says.

The name of the e-mail address should depend on what the account is used for. In the case of business, official or friendly correspond­ence, it makes sense to use your actual name or at least part of it. But for things like newsletter­s you can use a more general or cryptic name.

More important than the e-mail address is the password used for it, Griese says. The longer it is, the better. You should include upper and lower case letters as well as special characters and numbers.

A secure e-mail account is particular­ly important because many services send verificati­on codes or links such as password resets via e-mail.

You should also heed the rule “one service, one password” because otherwise if your account is hacked the hackers will have access to all the services that depend on that account.

If you consider abandoning an e-mail account you should either close it or just stop actively using it. either way you should let your contacts know and also inform them what your new e-mail address is.

It can also make sense to get all e-mails from other accounts sent straight to your main account. Most e-mail services offer this possibilit­y, Jekel says. — dpa

 ?? — 123rf.com ?? The more frequently you give out your e-mail address, the higher the likelihood that this address will get to spammers.
— 123rf.com The more frequently you give out your e-mail address, the higher the likelihood that this address will get to spammers.

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