Marc Weber wrote:
[line deleted to avoid being caught in a spam filter]
Origin b...@vim.org looks suspicious - because AFAIK sourceforge does
not allow sending emails (at least it was so in the past). Bram also has
a different email he's been using in the past.
[line deleted to avoid being
Having (reasnoble) sallarys in job offers doesn't look like spam to me.
Origin b...@vim.org looks suspicious - because AFAIK sourceforge does
not allow sending emails (at least it was so in the past). Bram also has
a different email he's been using in the past.
jobdayseu.com does not exist - which
Marc Weber wrote:
So does anybody have an idea whether this is a (badly
written) real job offer by Bram or whether it is what it
looks like: spam?
Of course it's spam. I have already notified Bram and deleted
the original post from the Google Groups archive.
I don't think there is anything
On Mon, Mar 26, 2012 at 16:30, Marc Weber marco-owe...@gmx.de wrote:
[...]
So does anybody have an idea whether this is a (badly written) real job
offer by Bram or whether it is what it looks like: spam?
It is SPAM. Just Google for jobdayseu.com and you'll see many
similar job offer letters
jamessan just told me that email specs allow to set different from
address - I just hoped that that would be part of spam protection
of the mailer - rejecting suspicious from contents.
Probably such spam protection would not help much because spammers could
register again using different email.
Marc Weber wrote:
It does not talk about the kind of employee they are looking
for (coder, artist, ..)
I had better warn any naive readers:
Never believe anything you read on the Internet, including
emails that appear to come from Bram.
Spam can be spam (it is genuinely promoting something).
Too bad too - I'm looking at leaving my job and was going
h. :-) But it looked too good to be true (it showed up
in my junk folder so I had to look on the mailing list folder to see if
anyone else got this). Oh well - back to looking. :-)
On 3/26/2012 6:30 PM, Marc Weber