3/4/2026 at 5:27:27 AM
I think the solution here would be to write a hand-written letter.Sure, someone can make AI write a letter with some kind of contraption holding a pen (I think StuffMadeHere did something adjacent to this). But it would likely be more obvious, plus it requires physical actions and a stamp. All things that low-effort AI spammers aren’t going to bother with.
by al_borland
3/4/2026 at 8:03:47 AM
Physical letters do not obviate scams, nor is the cost that prohibitive. I remember actual 419 scams on blue airmail all-in-one letters back in the 80s. And that was international post too.by cricalix
3/4/2026 at 11:56:19 AM
Think of it like changing your SSH port. It does nothing to prevent scams per se but you'll have to deal with only 0.00001% of them.by AlecSchueler
3/4/2026 at 1:57:01 PM
If you build an analogy based on what I get in my mailbox it's more like publishing your email on the internet.by skeeter2020
3/4/2026 at 9:10:38 AM
They don't remove it but they do reduce it.I have an inbox, and I do not receive a lot of scam post. In fact, I don't think I received any since I lived at this address (~10 years ). We do get a few promotional leaflets every other week.
OTOH, I get hundred of spam emails every day.
The former is something which I can handle manually easily, the other is not.
by riffraff
3/4/2026 at 9:11:15 AM
If you are targetting a list of well-known authors I guess outsourcing the writing of a couple of hundred handwritten letters shouldn't be too hard. I'm sure they they can find a school class in Nigeria or Kenya who would gladly do it for a few dollars — or a struggling teacher willing to get creative with the homework assignments.by Freak_NL
3/4/2026 at 12:39:45 PM
[dead]by onetokeoverthe
3/4/2026 at 2:14:09 PM
It doesn't have to prevent the scam completely, it just has to make harder for them to scam you than it would be to move on to scam someone else.by tristramb
3/4/2026 at 11:23:51 AM
One of my college lecturers only had a physical address on their webpage.Contact me: letter > envelope > stamp > post box
by cube00
3/4/2026 at 2:21:30 PM
I think it is a good general principle that, for any process that is likely to be a tempting target for scammers, you should require a non-electronic step to initiate that process. Requiring a physical letter of application for a job, for example.by tristramb
3/4/2026 at 11:26:46 AM
Uh - there are entire political lobbyist organizations that use something similar to an "autopen" to make mass letters personalized and appear to be handwritten...Heck - I have seen some in the mail from the "sell your house for cash" companies - typically behind the friendly, "homespun" personable facade, it is a REIT (real-estate investment trust) - or something similar...
(Myself, I can tell that these are mass-generated - but I am (at least also at this point in life - who knows when I get much older) easily able to tell a scam email, phone call or txt-type message - I can typically spot the signs - but those signs are typically there to "weed-out" the people that won't fall for the scam anyways...) - but my non-cynical, non-technical, non-paranoid friends and family need assistance spotting these...)
by jjkaczor
3/4/2026 at 11:08:53 AM
Or something like European E-Deliveries.They're "physical letters but digital," tied to a human identity and with proper proof of receipt.
by miki123211