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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!rutgers!faatcrl!iecc!Postmaster
- From: johnl@iecc.cambridge.ma.us (John R. Levine)
- Newsgroups: misc.consumers
- Subject: Re: Junk mail warning - "Exposures" catalog
- Message-ID: <9208171146.AA23578@iecc.cambridge.ma.us>
- Date: 17 Aug 92 15:46:33 GMT
- References: <1992Aug17.010742.13481@cbnewsd.cb.att.com>
- Sender: Postmaster@iecc.cambridge.ma.us
- Organization: I.E.C.C.
- Lines: 35
-
- >It seems that as soon as you order anything from a mail-
- >order house, your name gets on just about every junk-mail list in
- >existence.
-
- No kidding. About a year ago I got so sick and tired of the mountains of
- junk catalogs, as many as a dozen a day, that I got a rubber stamp saying
- PLEASE REMOVE ME FROM YOUR MAILING LIST, and started sending back all the
- order forms suitably endorsed. After several hundred such letters, the
- junk is down to a trickle, but it took a long time. Many of the places
- sent me back a form postcard saying they were taking me off their list but
- the labels are printed up so far in advance that I'd probably get another
- catalog or two. The fact that they have form postcards suggests that I'm
- not the only one who is tired of getting so much mail. And a few continue
- to send catalogs despite two or three requests to stop.
-
- Now and then I get junk mail with distinctive misspellings of my name or
- address so I can tell whose list they got it from. In that case I write a
- note telling them that the people who sold them my name did so despite my
- request to be removed from their list, so there are probably lots of other
- names on the list who don't want to be there, and why don't they not rent
- that junky list any more.
-
- The oft repeated suggestion to put your name on the Direct Marketing
- Association's "no exchange" list is of modest use, though you only stay on
- the list for six months and you have to write them again. Also, the Wall
- Street Journal reported that there are slimy outfits that actually use the
- DMA's list as a mailing list on the theory that the people on it will get
- less junk mail than usual and so less clutter. Great.
-
- You can ask most places not to sell or exchange your name when you order
- something. About two thirds of the time they honor the request.
-
- --
- Regards,
- John Levine, johnl@iecc.cambridge.ma.us, {spdcc|ima|world}!iecc!johnl
-