On Nov 5, 2008, at 7:26 AM, Roderick A. Anderson wrote: > FYI/Heads up, > > I /just/ received what looks like a phishing attempt for information > about Open Source PBX usage. It says it comes from Digium but all the > links (including the one for digium.com) point elsewhere. > > > Rod
Rod - It's a "legitimate" mail from Digium. We're trying to use the tools that others have built instead of building our own systems, so this particular company that we've chosen for research collection has their own hosts outside of the Digium DNS and server structure. Myself, I'm a big fan of Google Docs but they do have some shortcomings (like also not being in our DNS or server structure) and not everyone uses the same tools here at Digium. "There's more than one way to do it", as goes one of the more famous Asterisk sayings. Sorry if that message you received seemed unusual or unexpected because of the URL format. You can opt-out at the bottom of the emailings in the future if you wish, though some of the data that we're collecting will be tangentally useful in promoting OSS Asterisk in various forms. And to proactively answer the next question that may come up from someone: We've _never_ used the asterisk-* mailing list for any direct marketing email input lists. In other words: whatever email address you've used for the asterisk-* lists is private, and Digium never uses those for marketing purposes. JT --- John Todd [EMAIL PROTECTED] +1-256-428-6083 Asterisk Open Source Community Director _______________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
