I'm receiving bogus bounce messages like this (which are malformed even, the
Subject isn't properly encoded). I'm not sure what list is generating them or
what address but if we can figure out who could we drop whoever it is from the
list please?
---BeginMessage---
A mensagem de email
Gregory Stark wrote:
I'm receiving bogus bounce messages like this (which are malformed even, the
Subject isn't properly encoded). I'm not sure what list is generating them or
what address but if we can figure out who could we drop whoever it is from the
list please?
Andrew Dunstan [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Receipt of messages like this is guaranteed an immediate entry in my junk
filter. Use of this braindead software is bad enough, but being so clueless as
not to whitelist a technical mailing list you subscribe to is truly horrible.
It's worse than that
Gregory Stark [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It's worse than that in this case. This is an *impressively* broken
configuration.
Understatement of the week. The mail includes absolutely no evidence
about what message is allegedly being filtered. Are you sure that
this is really a filtering engine
Tom Lane wrote:
Gregory Stark [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It's worse than that in this case. This is an *impressively* broken
configuration.
Understatement of the week. The mail includes absolutely no evidence
about what message is allegedly being filtered. Are you sure that
this is
On Wed, Dec 19, 2007 at 11:15:37AM -0500, Tom Lane wrote:
hoping to draw responses from careless people? I've heard of web
comment-spammers who try to get other people to decode captchas
for them this way.
Yes. This is the latest spammer trick. They get people all over the globe
to decode
I wrote:
Adding to my suspicion is that I don't recall having seen one of these
personally,
I take that back --- some digging in my mail logs shows that I have
gotten a few of these, but they went straight to /dev/null because
my spam filters thought they were a virus. Have you checked whether