>
>Unless the spam is CLAIMING to be from Russia (doubtful) you need to 
>find out the IP ranges and black list them.   that's what I've done 
>with China and Korea.
>
>for future reference, here's the ISO list of country codes: 
><http://www.bcpl.net/~jspath/isocodes.html>

The fact that it has an .RU domain anywhere in the header is 
sufficient to convince me that it is spam.  I don't really need to 
know where it actually originated.  The originating IP# could be in 
Detroit, but it is sufficient evidence of spam for my purposes if it 
contains the suffixes .CZ or .RU.

Having to do it by IP# would be never-ending, as new spammers start 
up all the time. I just want to find someway to filter that suffix 
out without having to track down dozens of IP#s from every different 
spammer.

Currently, I do this in Eudora, but checking several hundred emails 
still takes a while, expecially when using a modem connection.  It 
would be much better to be able to do this at the email server level.

Rick Osgood
   Editor, CYBER/DARTS "The Darts Zine"
   http://www.cyberdarts.com
   E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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