IEntry has been an industry leader in online publishing and a leading b2b advertising resource. In actuality, they are a supporter of one of the largest spam bots on the internet. They maintain it by pushing each person to a massive network of multiple spam domains. When you request to be removed from one, they push your email address to another. They use the request for unsubscribe as a contact to legitimize spamming you from the other locations.
Susan Coppersmith is their director of sales, though she apparently has no clue of the technical aspects. I have called now on 4 different occasions to demand my email address be removed from their spam bot, and on 4 different ocassions they have claimed it was done. I am now even receiving emails from them on my ripoff report email address (one that has never been used for anything else) which means they are using brute force spamming techniques to push spam to any and all email combinations they can.
Please report these lousy dinosaurs to the FCC. Their information has been crap for the past 5 years anyway, now they must be getting desperate. That is likely the reason for the massive spam push, they have no other means to sell their ads than to guarantee placement in a newsletter. I would suggest no one pay to be in a newsletter that is likely going to Gmail and Yahoo spam folders by default (does in mine)
IEntry, Inc. Reviews
IEntry has been an industry leader in online publishing and a leading b2b advertising resource. In actuality, they are a supporter of one of the largest spam bots on the internet. They maintain it by pushing each person to a massive network of multiple spam domains. When you request to be removed from one, they push your email address to another. They use the request for unsubscribe as a contact to legitimize spamming you from the other locations.
Susan Coppersmith is their director of sales, though she apparently has no clue of the technical aspects. I have called now on 4 different occasions to demand my email address be removed from their spam bot, and on 4 different ocassions they have claimed it was done. I am now even receiving emails from them on my ripoff report email address (one that has never been used for anything else) which means they are using brute force spamming techniques to push spam to any and all email combinations they can.
Please report these lousy dinosaurs to the FCC. Their information has been crap for the past 5 years anyway, now they must be getting desperate. That is likely the reason for the massive spam push, they have no other means to sell their ads than to guarantee placement in a newsletter. I would suggest no one pay to be in a newsletter that is likely going to Gmail and Yahoo spam folders by default (does in mine)