This is one of the many anti-harvesting techniques used against automated spambots. This one is used massively, so there are lot of spambots used to it and it does not work 100%. You can see some statistics and comparison of various anti-harvesting techniques in this great article
https://web.archive.org/web/20180811103545/http://techblog.tilllate.com/2008/07/20/ten-methods-to-obfuscate-e-mail-addresses-compared/
I personally prefer the css display:none technique combined with javascript. See the example:
<a href="mailto:myemail@ignoreme-example.com">myemail@<span style="display:none;">ignoreme-</span>example.com
And use javascript to remove it from href element. This way it works for users with javascript enabled, and users with disabled javascript at least see address correctly, but of course, clicking does not work correctly.