Jacob Sam-La Rose wrote:
>
>Headers:
>
>Subject: FYI (important): any email to / Jacob this morning...
> Date: 26 January 2007 11:00:05 GMT
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
As Brad points out in another reply, these don't look like raw message
headers for a few reasons, not the
At 10:59 PM + 1/26/07, Jacob Sam-La Rose wrote:
>> What Mailman version is this?
>
>2.1.9.cp2
That's a cPanel version number. Please see FAQ 6.11.
>> Do you have a copy of the message from the list - complete with all
>> headers? If nothing else, if the list is archived, this copy will b
Thanks for the response, Mark. I'm only just getting used to the
concept of community via mailing list (I'm more used to user forums...!)
On 26 Jan 2007, at 19:00, Mark Sapiro wrote:
> Jacob Sam-La Rose wrote:
>>
>> I've got my list configured as an announcement-only list, and the
>> first few
Jacob Sam-La Rose wrote:
>
>I've got my list configured as an announcement-only list, and the
>first few mailings I've sent have gone through exactly as planned. I
>use "Approved: password" as the first line to approve mailings. I
>inadvertently sent email to the list from one of my other e
Hi.
I've got my list configured as an announcement-only list, and the
first few mailings I've sent have gone through exactly as planned. I
use "Approved: password" as the first line to approve mailings. I
inadvertently sent email to the list from one of my other email
addresses, and when
> "Kai" == Kai Schaetzl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Kai> So, put "Approved: password" in the first line or as a
Kai> header. Note, this will be parsed away and NOT distributed to
Kai> the list, don't worry!
Well, worry a little. It's cleartext, so unless you're using a VPN/
encry
Sean wrote on Thu, 6 May 2004 12:12:18 -0400 (EDT):
> A more secure alternative is for your approved posters to add an
> Approved header to their postings as a header, or as the first line of
> the post).
>
> I'd like to implement this but I'm uncertain to go about it. I'm pretty
> certain t
Hi,
I'm running a list on Mailman 2.1.3 and I am looking to secure my list as
much as possible. I saw this in FAQ 3.11
(http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/faqw-mm.py?req=show&file=faq03.011.htp):
A more secure alternative is for your approved posters to add an
Approved header to their postings a
On Wed, 23 Oct 2002 19:00:06 +0200
Dan Richter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Pardon me for being a pain here, but isn't it ridiculously easy to
> forge a From:, and also rather easy to forge an envelope?
From: is trivial under many MTAs. Envelope requires understanding SMTP
and driving that manu
> >Mailman v2.1 authenticates on From: and envelope.
What is used?
>
> Pardon me for being a pain here, but isn't it ridiculously easy to forge a
> From:, and also rather easy to forge an envelope?
>
> Now I'll be humble and admit that I don't even know what an envelope is.
So
> my question about t
Mailman doesn't use secret aliased.
That's good.
Mailman v2.0 authenticates on From: or envelope (you pick).
Mailman v2.1 authenticates on From: and envelope.
Pardon me for being a pain here, but isn't it ridiculously easy to forge a
From:, and also rather easy to forge an envelope?
Now
On Wed, 23 Oct 2002 08:45:46 +0200
Dan Richter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I was using Majordomo, but I got scared off when I realized that
> anyone could bypass the list posting restrictions by posting to the
> correct alias. (The normal list alias processes, then redirects to a
> second alias
On Wed, Oct 23, 2002 at 08:45:46AM +0200, Dan Richter wrote:
> I was using Majordomo, but I got scared off when I realized that anyone
> could bypass the list posting restrictions by posting to the correct alias.
> (The normal list alias processes, then redirects to a second alias which
> blind
I had that- question
and in current of the week tried to get here answer, but alas, nobody not
was able on this answer, come to go to majordomo
> I was using Majordomo, but I got scared off when I realized that anyone
> could bypass the list posting restrictions by posting to the correct
alias.
>
I was using Majordomo, but I got scared off when I realized that anyone
could bypass the list posting restrictions by posting to the correct alias.
(The normal list alias processes, then redirects to a second alias which
blindly transmits.) The "blind forward" alias shows up in the headers, so I
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