Just for your information (nothing can be done about it, I think). My provider blocks based not on the subject, but on the recipient of the *outgoing* mail (denies getweb@..., www4mail@... agora@..., and so on, and now it also denies binky). Anyway, the reason for this mail.
Ernesto (and everyone else that is kind enough to set up a free mail2web server), thanks. I've seen the subject option, and I think it is a nice one, but I've also seen some complaints about it. I have a suggestion (I don't know if it would be easy to implement). The subject command could be, instead of an ON/OFF switch, some kind of configuration, like SUBJECT OFF <-- no subject at all SUBJECT Hello, my friend <-- subject: Hello, my friend SUBJECT this is a (%full) test <-- subject: this is a (http://www.google.com) test SUBJECT this is a %partial address <-- subject: this is a google.com address SUBJECT DEFAULT <-- (the default subject) I guess that could solve any controversy (if it could be implemented, perhaps I could help with that), that way you can use the subject you like. That wouldn't help *me* at all, but I think it's not a bad idea. Also, I have a question. Are those mail2web programs' sources available? I'd like to study one (perhaps modify it a bit and see what can I do about the filters). Well, good bye. Kyrie. PS: Ernesto, are you cuban??? ------------------------------------------------- Este mensaje fue enviado usando el servicio de correo en web de Infomed http://webmail.sld.cu ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ACCMAIL Info (automatically generated) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To UNSUBscribe: Send UNSUBSCRIBE ACCMAIL to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To get the ACCMAIL FAQ: Send e-mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" and enter only this line in the BODY of the note: send usenet/news.answers/internet-services/access-via-email ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
