Dear, Scott, et. al. Thank you very much for all of the recommendations. It is definitely my itent to learn how to do all of the possible techniques that people suggested when responding to my original e-mail, eventually. But for the time being I think I'll try the "block the E-mail based on the IP address" option that Scott suggested. It doesn't seem to be too far away in theory and execution from the SENDERBLOCK test that I am already running.
Oh, how I wish I were more adventurous to try all of those other options right now that other suggested! > The primary other option is to block the E-mail based on the IP address > (211.241.219.3, from the top Received: header). The advantage of this is > that you will block any E-mail that the spammer sends from that IP, > regardless of the return address they use. However, the disadvantage is > that spammers will often use open relays, and switch from one to another > fairly often (and other spammers have 100s or 1,000s of compromised > computers that they can send from, each with a different IP). Am I correct that the setup for this option is outlined in the section labeled "Your own IP blacklists" in the Declude JunkMail manual? Thanks In Advance, Dan Geiser <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ==================================================================== This E-mail is scanned and free from viruses. www.nexustechgroup.com --- [This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)] --- This E-mail came from the Declude.JunkMail mailing list. To unsubscribe, just send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and type "unsubscribe Declude.JunkMail". The archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com.
