On Friday 19 March 2004 08:27 am, Matt Kettler wrote:

> Yes. It's not very new.. basically the motivation is that many of these
> fake antispam products are actually email-address-harvesting systems that
> feed spam databases. Instead of reducing spam, they increase it.

I saw a product-review of VetoMail that looked legit, and said VetoMail was 
decent.  It might be that some anti-spam products have affiliate programs, so 
spammers link to the anti-spam pages with their affiliate code to get money.

-- 
Give a man a match, and he'll be warm for a minute, but set him on
fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.

Advanced SPAM filtering software: http://spamassassin.org

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