> > 1) You setup an auto forwarder from your domain to your AOL email
> > account ([EMAIL PROTECTED] -> [EMAIL PROTECTED]). 2) Your customers send
> > emails to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and the emails gets forwarded to
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] 3) One day you receive some spam at [EMAIL PROTECTED],
> > which was auto forwarded directly to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 4) You open your
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] mail box and see the spam, so click to Mark it as SPAM
> > and add it to your AOL spam filter . 5) AOL's spam filter does not
> > register the originator of the email as the spammer - instead, it
> > registers the last place the email came from as the spammer.  And in
> > this case and the last place the email came from is our email server
> > which hosts [EMAIL PROTECTED] 6) AOL will then blacklist the entire
> > mail server, so that no one can send email to any AOL email accounts.

What bright 'engineer' thinks it's acceptable to give user-input of
pressing a 'spam' button so much control over shutting down servers?
Sounds like total incompetence... I can see it being a part of a
weighted factor, but one click to shut down a server? Sounds ripe for
malicious attacks to block people/companies from sending to ANY aol
users...


-- 
Derek


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