LA Times -- March 26, 2007

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Stopping junk mail for living and dead, Opt-outs can slow the torrent of solicitations to computer and postal mailboxes and phones -- by Lev Grossman

Just because you're dead doesn't mean you can't keep getting junk mail.

Unsolicited offers for credit cards, loans, insurance, vacation packages and more seem to be a part of life -- and death. Many people report that offers keep arriving long after a loved one has moved on to a place where Visa is not accepted. But there are ways to curb the offers -- for both the living and dead -- whether they come by e-mail, regular mail or telephone.

Opt-outs, as they referred to in the direct sales industry, allow people to sign up to be removed from various types of solicitation lists. Some opt-outs are well known, such as the national Do Not Call Registry designed to halt unsolicited telemarketing calls. But others, such as the Deceased Do Not Contact List offered by the Direct Marketing Assn., are more obscure. The nonprofit World Privacy Forum, a San Diego-based public interest research group, today released its guide to prominent opt- outs. It's at www.worldprivacyforum.org/toptenoptout.html. "When people find out the work we do on privacy matters, they say, 'I hate it when I get all those credit card offers in the mail,' " said Pam Dixon, executive director of the organization. "When I tell them they can do something about that, they get all excited."

Here's a look at some of the opt-outs. The accompanying chart has website addresses for additional information.

If you take all or even a few of these measures, you may cut way down on what the mail carrier hauls to your house every day. You can take some bulk out of your bulk mail -- while you're still around to enjoy it.

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email: david.colker@latimes.com

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Opting out -- You can cut back on unsolicited sales pitches and catalogs by getting yourself on to opt-out lists. Here's where to get more information.


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