> > >>The newsletter for the Electronic Frontier Foundation is not spam. > > This is still a matter of personal opinion. You must never forget this > fact. > > These two sentences pretty much sum up with what I think is unfixable > about Razor. If you want to use Razor to 'block' spam, then everyone > using it has to have the same definition os 'spam' or I suspect this > thread will go on as long as Razor does.
Probably. > Some people expect Razor to block 'spam' using a reasonable definition > of what spam is (which, btw, the EFF newsletter would NOT fall under), If it is sent in bulk to people that haven't requested it then it MUST be considered spam! I, like many others have several 'honeypot' accounts (in fact we have a couple of entire domains used as honeypots), and any mail sent to any of these accounts or domains are automatically reported as spam. If someone decides to sign up for the EFF mailing list using any of these honeypot accounts then it WILL be reported as spam. The problem isn't with razor, or the fact that honeypots are being used, the problem here lies solely with EFF for not bothering to validate subscriptions. Rod ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Scholarships for Techies! Can't afford IT training? All 2003 ictp students receive scholarships. Get hands-on training in Microsoft, Cisco, Sun, Linux/UNIX, and more. www.ictp.com/training/sourceforge.asp _______________________________________________ Razor-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/razor-users