I disagree. You want users to have some trust that you're at least trying to do the right thing. I use unique forwarding e-mails for every website I'm signed up to, and I've noticed a lot of spam harvested from Github. It makes me feel less warm & fuzzy about an otherwise excellent website.
Using one of the first two methods in the article is simple, so why not implement it? You're right that spammers will eventually get widely used e-mails, but you can minimize the chance it's your website's fault. The only reason I can see not to do it is cross-browser/accessibility issues. Does anyone know if these techniques cause problems?
Using one of the first two methods in the article is simple, so why not implement it? You're right that spammers will eventually get widely used e-mails, but you can minimize the chance it's your website's fault. The only reason I can see not to do it is cross-browser/accessibility issues. Does anyone know if these techniques cause problems?