Dnia 2.11.2024 o godz. 18:45:13 Sebastian Nielsen via mailop pisze: > My blocklist is: > > /\.(accountant|accountants|asia|auto|berlin|bid|buzz|camera|car|cam|cars|casa|cfd|christmas|click|club|college|computer|country|cricket|cyou|date|design|download|exposed|email|fail|faith|finance|fit|fun|gdn|global|guru|help|host|jetzt|kim|icu|life|live|link|loan|london|media|men|mom|news|ninja|online|page|party|photography|pro|protection|pub|racing|realtor|reise|ren|rent|rest|review|rocks|science|security|shop|site|solutions|space|storage|store|stream|study|surf|tech|technology|theatre|today|top|trade|university|uno|us|viajes|vip|vividal|wang|webcam|website|win|work|works|world|xin|xyz|zip|xn--.*)$/
I have seen quite a lot of legitimate email sent from *.shop and *.pro domains, and *.us is USA country code TLD and it's something like standard for schools (and some more public institutions) in USA to have subdomains in it. So I would advise against blocking these, because you might lose legitimate mail. I have also encountered legitimate websites and email addresses in *.online and *.email, but these were just a few cases, maybe ten in total. But one particular message coming from an *.online domain was very important for me, as it was a document I have ordered, and it would be quite a trouble for me if I'd lose that mail due to blocking the .online TLD. I have also seen quite legitimate websites in *.top, but no mail from this domain. For the rest of the above TLDs, I haven't even seen a useful website with an address in any of these domains. But I don't block them because I get absolutely no mail from them. All the spam coming to my server is from "traditional" .com/.org/.net etc. TLDs. -- Regards, Jaroslaw Rafa r...@rafa.eu.org -- "In a million years, when kids go to school, they're gonna know: once there was a Hushpuppy, and she lived with her daddy in the Bathtub." _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop