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BestPrac.Org
Stop Spam : Best Practice in Email
Spam Prevention and Eradication
Understanding Email Netiquette
(Released - September, 2004)
In life, it is the moral responsibility for the elder to
teach the younger, or for the experienced to teach the inexperienced.
In internet life, the same moral responsibility applies in regards to
correct use of email.
One large difference is that, in internet life, it is
very often the younger who are the experienced. The current waves of
growth in internet usage, the new users, are largely from the older
generations.
Accordingly, it becomes the responsibility of the
experienced users to educate and train all newer users in the correct
usage of email. One simple way of imparting this education to lesser
experienced internet users is to politely refer them to this article,
either on the page you are currently reading or at http://www.bestprac.org/articles/netiquette.shtml
The internet life carries its own versions of courtesy,
privacy and security issues that all users need to know. Hence a new
word has entered the vocabulary - Netiquette. (Internet etiquette.)
For example:
- In internet and email culture, ALL CAPITALS IS AKIN
TO SHOUTING and is universally seen as rude and impolite.
- New email users often forget to include a brief
Subject line on their emails, or do not understand the importance of
it. Ordinary postal service "snail-mail" does not ordinarily require a
heading about the contents of the letter on the outside of the envelope
- though many posted periodicals and many commercial accounts nowadays
do identify the contents or level of importance on the outside of the
envelope. Email, however, operates very differently from snail-mail.
Never omit a subject line, and keep your subject line brief and
relevant. Without a subject line, your email will probably be seen as
yet another junk email and be deleted unread by the intended recipient.
More commonly, it may not even reach the recipient at all. Many ISPs
filter suspicious looking emails and delete them without delivery. A
blank subject line to an email filter is like waving a red rag in front
of a bull.
- Never send emails to people you do not know without
their express permission. Only send email to people who you know, or
who have clearly indicated that they want to receive correspondence
from you. Violation of this act of Netiquette can land you in all sorts
of trouble. You will be labelled as a spammer. In some states or
countries, you risk being charged with criminal or civil violations of
the law for sending unsolicited email. Even in countries or states
where there is no specific law prohibiting unsolicited email, it is
regarded as bad manners and offensive. If you check with your ISP, you
will almost always find that they reserve the right to terminate your
internet connection if they receive complaints about you for sending
unsolicited email.
- Even when sending email to people that you do know,
only send them what they are likely to want. Not everyone you know
wants jokes or other "chain email" forwarded to them. Not everywhere
shares your sense of humour or has the time while connected at work to
be reading frivolous emails. If you like forwarding jokes or other
"chain emails" to your friends, check with them first to be sure they
are happy to receive them.
- Think before you type. Type, then think again. Unlike
face-to-face or voice-to-voice communications, the easily and quickly
typed email can all too easily be a source for expressing your feelings
in the bluntest of ways. Similarly, the hastily written word may lack
feelings and not express the emotions that can be sensed with eye
contact or voice modulation in other forms of communications. It is too
easy to forget that there is a human at the other end - not just a
computer. You can very easily damage your own reputation and destroy
friendships with thoughtless emails. Once an email is sent, you cannot
retrieve it. The damage is done.
While to the experienced user all of the above is simply
common sense, as the old saying goes "Common sense is not really all
that common." These basics are not innate within the human sole.
Newcomers need to be taught.
When to use To:, CC: or BCC:
Another vital area of appropriate email usage goes
beyond merely being courteous in your communications - the correct use
of To: or CC: or BCC when adding recipients to the email your are
sending.
All popular email software and all web-email accounts
give you a choice of these three different ways to add a recipient for
your email. (Sometimes you might need to check your software menu and
enable BCC as a visible option. It is not a visible option by default
in all email software, unfortunately.) Your choice has vital privacy
and security implications, so it is important to know which to use and
when. While "To:" is self explanatory, a brief definition and history
of CC: and BCC: will help you understand their correct usage.
CC: is a term from old fashioned
secretarial typing. It stands for "Carbon Copy". In days of old, prior
to photocopiers or word processors with laser printers, copies of
letters were made by inserting two sheets of typing with a sheet of
carbon paper in between into the typewriter. When a secretary typed a
letter that was meant for one person though another person (or other
people) was to receive a copy, and the first person was to be informed
that a copy was being sent to another person, the typist would add a
line under the signature at the end of the letter, along the lines of:
CC: Joe Bloggs.
Jane Smith.
This convention alerted to direct recipient to the fact
that the letter had also been sent to other specific people.
If you did not want the direct recipient to know that
copies were sent to other people, you'd simply not include a CC: line
at the end of the letter.
BCC: stands for "Blind Carbon Copy".
It is the electronic equivalent of sending a letter to multiple people
without a CC: line. It means that people receive the email without any
trace of who else is also receiving it being revealed.
Given those definitions, there are simple guidelines as
to when you should use To:, CC: or BCC: in the emails that you send:
Simple Guidelines:
If your email is being sent to just one person or email
address, place it in the "To:" section.
If your email is being sent to more than one recipient
and all the recipients truly need to know who else is receiving it, put
all the addresses in the CC: section.
If your email is being sent to more than one recipient
but there is no urgent reason for all the recipients to know the names
and email addresses of everyone else to whom it is being sent, put all
the addresses in the BCC: section.
(Some email software requires at least one address to be
placed in the To: section. If yours insists on this when you are trying
to send a CC or BCC email, put your own email address in the To:
section.)
Understanding these basic principles of email usage has
many benefits. It preserves the privacy of your contacts. It prevents
lists of names and email addresses being sent to strangers when someone
to whom you send an email then forwards it to others. It helps to
prevent viruses, worms and trojans being accidentally spread by your
friends with out-of-date antivirus programs.
Most of all, it shows the people with whom you
communicate that you are sensible and responsible in your online
behavior. It shows that you take their privacy and security seriously.
It builds trust in your communications.
(Special note to ISPs,
Bloggers, Webmasters and others - Please feel free to link
directly to this article. Doing so will help educate, promote and
encourage proper Email Netiquette worldwide.)
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