Actually it doesn't stop there.  Depending on the structure of your organization
you may need some of your admin people to ensure that all your internal staff's
email are also explicitly allowed.  I setup my SPAM filters to allow the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (as well as a few other ones) a long time ago but I
found that when I forwarded a message to other members on our staff to ensure it
got taken care of (read: transferred!) their mail filters threw my message in
their SPAM/Ignore folders.

Very slimey on Verisign's part, I agree.

Jack

Swerve wrote:

> That's just crazy.
>
> swerve
>
> > From: Ken Kaprielian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 09:26:47 -0400
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: re: Verisign outbound-response replies caught by my filter.
> >
> > Dear Christine, Frank and everyone at OpenSRS,
> >
> > Per your suggestion I checked my junk message center and you were on the
> > mark. The outbound response was right there in with the rest of the junk
> > filtered mail.  Oh, there are so clever! Put a bunch of spammy junk in their
> > transfer request reply in order to make it get caught in filtering so you
> > never see it.
> >
> > It explains why they changed the format of the outbound request becaue I
> > used to get them.  Despicable, utterly despicable.  Verisign are truly
> > abominable. Thank you for this tip.  I should have seen it coming. Everyone,
> > if you haven't already, make sure [EMAIL PROTECTED] is
> > absolutely understood by your filtering software or service as an approved
> > sender.
> >
> > Sincerely,
> >
> >
> > Ken Kaprielian
> > IAC WebServices
> >
> >

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