Martin Zobel-Helas wrote: >> > How does everyone deal with this (I mean other than filtering)? >> >> If anyone is doing a substantially better job of filtering than the >> bts is, let [EMAIL PROTECTED] know; but in general you should just >> see the few spammers who end up being successful. >
I have been dealing with gcc's bugzilla, KDE's bugs.kde.org, mozilla's bug tracking system etc., I never ever received any spam messages from these bug tracking systems. The spam emails seem to come only from BTS. May be we can learn from them as to what they are doing (mandatory registration?) better. > Same for lists.debian.org. Just to give an impression from yesterdays > statistics: > > 94108 delivery attempts (incoming) > 51598 messages received (in total) > rest blocked by whatever RBL > 10426 messages feed to spam search software > rest already cought by static filtering > 1523 messages tagged as "no spam" > ======================================= > ~1% of delivery attempts (incoming) is still send out to the lists > > If we now say, that out of these 1523 mails, ~150 mails are still spam, > this makes a 0.1% rate of spam that is still deleivired to the lists. > I am not saying the lists are not filtering spam emails. Of course they do and they do an excellent job at that. But as an end user, all I see is 1523 emails, 150 of them are spam ==> 10% spam emails from debian.org lists. May be a policy change is required here as well. I dont know what would be the correct way, but this method sure does seem inefficient and waste of resources. hth raju -- Kamaraju S Kusumanchi http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/kk288/ http://malayamaarutham.blogspot.com/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]