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Preface: I'm honestly not sure if this should be on StackOverflow, SuperUser or Doctype. If it needs to be on SuperUser please move it. If it needs to be on Doctype please close it and I'll re-post it there.

We all know that putting your email address anywhere on the Internet in any format, be it in plain text or a mailto: link, will cause it to be harvested by a spambot. And there are many questions already on the topic here.

For companies though, spambots are just part of the cost of doing business. So while using something like listing your email address in the form of [someone] [at] [companyname] [dot] [com] may thwart a spam bot, it also makes a potentially paying customer go through just enough hassle to ignore you (and it's possible the user isn't savvy enough to understand what's going on), so you just sort of suck it up and deal with the spam.

However, I've got a client who has a different issue - they have potential customers who will go to several dozen websites, click on the email address, paste in a prepared text and subject (sometimes going so far as to also paste in my client's business name to appear like it's not a prepared text they're sending to everyone). My client then spends time hand-crafting a response, only to never hear from the potential customer again because in this "casual spammer" approach, the vendor that sends back the lowest hard dollar amount in their email pretty much wins (and the nature of my client's business is such that almost without fail the vendor which will quote you a dollar amount without having met you is a big red flag but that's beside the point).

So the client has suggested that while we leave their email on the site in [email protected] format, we don't make it a clickable mailto: link. The thought is that maybe the act of having to select and copy the email address into a message would thwart some of the "mass price shopping" customers. My client's industry does not lend itself to repeat business so they're not likely to ever land these customers anyway and losing them to this approach is ultimately harmless.

I'm skeptical about this but I'm curious if there's any better ideas to thwart "casual" spammers.

To Clarify: I'm not worried about spambots or screen scrapers or anything habitual or automatic. I'm talking about the concept that an actual person goes to dozens of similar websites sending identical emails to each company in order to find the lowest price. These are the customers which would never hire my client and so we're looking for a way to slow or thwart them without turning away people who aren't just spamming as many companies as they can find.

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  • It's an interesting question, put not a programming question. I'd try doctype, but if they don't accept it, it may belong on a business forum somewhere.
    – Jon B
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:40
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    Can you trace the IP address? No matter how the user sends the e-mail, other than through a proxy, which you can detect as well, he should not be able to mask his IP. In which case it should be the same IP over and over, so then you can just block that particular IP (and proxies for that matter).
    – Zoidberg
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:41
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    This is a business question, not a programming question. The proposal is to make the site a bit less convenient to use, in hopes of discouraging the casual people hitting several sites and not the casual people (little return business, remember) who aren't. It sounds like a bad idea to me. Sep 2, 2009 at 16:10

4 Answers 4

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Honestly I don't think this problem has a technical solution. Even if the address is non-clickable, or you have to fill out a form, someone is probably still going to request the quote.

This needs to be solved in the sales process. Whoever answers these emails needs to be able to sense that they are bogus, and reply with a brief request for more information (which will likely go ignored).

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  • You could by default give a short answer and request some trivial amount of information that doesn't require a lot of time and only do a thorough answer if that email response from you is answered (hopefully only by real customers). If your real customers are not time sensitive, you could just reply with "I am getting back to you in x days/weeks, is that okay?" and if a reply comes, only answer then (maybe after a quick check again if they are still interested) with a thorough email.
    – xuiqzy
    Feb 15 at 0:30
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I tend to not put an e-mail address up. Instead, I provide a contact form that sends an e-mail.

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  • That kind of annoys me. I like seeing an email address and phone number. Make it easier for me to get in touch, not harder.
    – Jon B
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:38
  • We have that, too. But are there a significant number of people out there that don't like that approach? I know when I go to a company's site and fill out a form I sometimes feel like I'm sending a message into a blank void whereas if I sent an email from Outlook or GMail or whatever I have evidence on my side that I actually sent them something.
    – Tom Kidd
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:38
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If you have to put an email address on a page, you could build it in-line with JavaScript, in such a way that the text is unrecognisable to a screen scraper, e.g.

document.write("<" + "a hr" + "ef=" + "'ma" + "ilt" + "o:" + address + "'" + ">" + address + "<" + "/" + "a" + ">");

Where you would set the address variable in a similar way.

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  • Screen scrapers aren't the problem here - real people are. Sep 2, 2009 at 15:42
  • No offense, but spam bots and screen scrapers are not the issue. Potential customers (actual humans) are literally clicking on the contacts on as many sites in this sector as possible and then going with the one with the lowest price. These are the kinds of customers my client will not land anyway so we want a way to thwart them.
    – Tom Kidd
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:43
  • This would thwart anyone with NoScript. Sep 2, 2009 at 15:43
  • Ah, but how does the spammer obtain your email address if not by scraping your site? He's not going to waste time manually scanning millions of site updates looking for nuggets of gold. Sep 2, 2009 at 15:44
  • @Christian - the question states that the spammer IS manually going to each site. Not millions, but probably dozens. This is to request many quotes for some product. The company in question is not interested in these quote requests.
    – Jon B
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:46
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To thrawt scrapers, you could inject the email address after the page loads via javascript. However, it doesn't sound like you are as concerned with scrapers as authentic users sending emails. In which case, I do not have an answer for you.

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  • Yeah it's not the scrapers I'm worried about
    – Tom Kidd
    Sep 2, 2009 at 15:43

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