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Lame spam of the day: Raw spam merge text

Robert Weiner

Some newbie spammer posted a message on my site that shows the contents of their spam merge database. I recognize so many snippets that have appeared in my spam folder over the years. { {I have|I’ve} been {surfing|browsing} online more than {three|3|2|4} hours today, yet I never found any interesting article like yours. .|

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Using a CMS to Make Your Website Social

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

A good CMS should also include a built-in Spam filter to keep obviously unrelated content from cluttering your comments sections. Letting them subscribe to your site content through RSS feeds or email can help them ensure they’re getting the most-update information from your organization with ease and convenience.

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Tools to Make Your Holiday Email Campaign Easier

NonProfit Hub

Another thing you can do with MailChimp is create an RSS campaign. Email Spam Test. Are you worried your emails are getting thrown into spam folders? Are you worried your emails are getting thrown into spam folders? The system will pull articles from your blog and send them out on a set schedule. The Hemingway App.

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Strengthen Your Community with a Knowledge Sharing Network

NTEN

Peter Campbell leveraged RSS to pull the tagged items into nptech. Deeper conversations about practice take place in blog comments, webinars, online chats and on Facebook. If users have to create an account, that in itself is a barrier, but it will allow you to delete accounts that spam.

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A Conversation with Michael Gilbert on Nonprofit Blogging

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

On the side, by personal email I was sharing interesting links, articles, and conversations with people who I thought might be interested. The online conversations that are starting around those issues are very exciting. They are both spam magnets and I have enough trouble dealing with email spam as it is.

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So you want a Facebook Fan Page for Your Nonprofit? Here's the Scoop!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Worst thing you can do with a page is dump an RSS feed into the Page - won't be as successful. It's intended to prevent spam. It is useful to have a group for more intimate conversations, where a page is more public You can have both. Wall Tab - accuracy updates of information. Write Something" lets you post rich content".

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10 Elements of an Effective Nonprofit or Do-Good Blog

Have Fun - Do Good

Make it easy to subscribe Have an rss feed. Put a prompt to subscribe by rss and email at the top of your blog. Moderate your comments if you are concerned about inappropriate remarks, or spam. If the conversation becomes too heated, you can always take it over to email. Facilitate commenting Allow commenting.