https://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/show_bug.cgi?id=5922





--- Comment #10 from Sidney Markowitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  2008-06-17 17:15:15 
PST ---
(in reply to comment #9)

I'm not ready to agree to removing efax.com from the def whitelist yet. Even if
you don't remember signing up for a free efax account, it does look like you
did sign up at some point, perhaps as part of whatever you did with them in
2004. I just went to the efax.co web site to sign up for an eFax-Free account
and confirmed that they do use confirmed opt-in, i.e., they send an email to
the address that you register with and require clicking on a link in that email
to activate the new account.

Given that, I think that you should follow the link in the emails you received
to unsubscribe, deactivating the efax-Free account. Ordinarily that is not a
wise course of action in actual spam, but there is no evidence that eFax.com is
improper about handling subscription and unsubscription requests. If you do
that and still get the emails, then that would be a different story. But so far
it still seems more likely that eFax.com is not spamming, but sends what some
people think is spam, which is the reason to have them on the def whitelist.

I'll leave this bug open for a bit longer until we hear the results of your
attempt to unsubscribe from the account.


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