Thanks for the suggestion, David!

For those of you listed on the TIPS members page, I would be happy to
encrypt your e-mail address with javascript.  

In your listing, instead of your e-mail address, you would see "E-mail
Yourname".  Clicking on that text would call up your default e-mail program.
Or you could mouse over the text and the e-mail address would appear in the
bottom bar of your browser (Netscape or Explorer).  

For an example, go to the TIPS members page:
http://flightline.highline.edu/sfrantz/tips/index.htm

and scroll down to my name: Frantz, Sue.

--
Sue Frantz          Highline Community College        
Psychology          Des Moines, WA
206.878.3710 x3404  [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
http://flightline.highline.edu/sfrantz/

> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Likely [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 18, 2002 9:10 AM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences
> Subject: Re: Supporting Frantz's lizt
> 
> 
> At 11:13 PM 17/09/02 -0400, S. Black wrote to encourage 
> TIPSters to send in 
> names and particulars to Sue Franz's list.
> 
> I wondered if people might be a tad reluctant to have their 
> email addresses 
> appear on a public web page because spam demons and hackers 
> will find it 
> and send you a considerable amount of garbage.  (Certainly, 
> they found me 
> long ago, probably from the address on my own pages. Norton 
> anti-virus is 
> kept pretty busy, and so is my delete key. My university, 
> bless 'em, is 
> trying out Spam Assassin, so that problem should be ameliorated soon.)
> I understand that there are some ways to list addresses while 
> fooling the 
> demons. I think it's safe to post an email address if you put 
> some fake 
> characters -- blanks will do, or put "at" instead of @  -- in 
> the address, 
> and explain to legit users that they will have to retype it, 
> or copy and 
> edit. For something that you can click-to-mail, I've seen 
> javascripts that 
> generate the address "on the fly" which also is said to fool 
> the address 
> harvesters. (Sue, you might know all this stuff better than 
> me, or even be 
> using some anti-demon tricks already.)
> 
> -David
> ===================================================================
> David G. Likely, Department of Psychology
> University of New Brunswick
> Fredericton, N. B., Canada  E3B 5A3
> History of Psychology: 
http://www.unb.ca/psychology/likely/psyc4053.htm
OALP Login for Psyc4054: httpS://www.unb.ca/sweb/psych/likely



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