Hi Markus! Getting your messages now, for me the solution was as simple as allowing email through with [declude in the subject, I don't like blocking by IP unless its a "legit" email marketing company who doesn't change IP addresses and with the nifty new remoteip 0 cidr filtering capability its easy to bypass the ip blocking.
Odd thing is I was nailing some of your email with interbusiness.it and I don't see that anywhere in the headers of your current messages I do punish dot info and dot biz quite severely with weight, aside from your dot info domain the other 799,999 are suspect to me :-) your English is great its alot better than quite a few groups of people here in the US Rick Davidson National Systems Manager North American Title Group 440-953-9346 - Office 440-953-0925 - Fax 440-487-7344 - Mobile [EMAIL PROTECTED] - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gufler Markus" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2004 5:45 PM Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] COMBO-Filter solution for todays german polite emails > > Hopefully it's not because my email-address is an info domain. Over 2 years ago (march 2002) there was registered already over 800000 info domains around the world. As I know on the IPSwitch website you can't subscribe to the newsletter because ".info is not a valid top level domain" > Looks like internet is old enough now to have also some conservative people inside ;-) > > I assume that most of my messages will be filtered because the dynamic IP addresses of our DSL-connection is listed in more or less IP-Blacklists. This not because we're an open relay but because this are dynamic IP's and the entire class B range seems to be blacklisted (at least temporary). > I can understand that most people in oversea can see more spam then legit messages comming from this IPs. And I can understand if someone decides to punish them. > We also assign a small weight to any message comming from the USA because from the 26% of all messages comming from the USA only 3% are legit messages. > This should not be a punishment for a country, but it's simple mathematic logic to improve our spam filters detection rate. > > > Maybe you can see this message only because I send them - for this time - trough the webmail interface and so from a "clean" IP address. > > What I would suggest is that anyone reading messages in this list should try to whitelist declude list messages. > There are several cases that declude list messages "contains" suspicious content: spam examples, filter definitions, or simple help request from an admin that has an IP blacklisted mailserver. > > If you don't whitelist declude list messages very probably you're missing some important information. > > As I can understand, the best way to whitelist declude messages is to whitelist the IP of the declude list server: > > Simply put > > WHITELIST IP 68.162.218.198 > > in your global.cfg line. > > Hope this helps, and you can understand my "english" > > --- > Gufler Markus > > --- > [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. > --- [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.
