Hi
 
Ever heard about PGP? As long as my mail is PGP encrypted, I'd invite about any agency 
to take their best shot at it. For customers who don't want to send encrypted mail (or 
are not capable of), there's still the possibility to get an xDSL-Connection with a 
static IP address. imo Providers should only block dial-up and other dynamic IP ranges 
from sending mail. As soon as the IP address can be clearly assigned to a company or 
private person AND there's still SPAM from it, the offender's provider could then 
block outgoing port 25 connections. Again, let me know if I'm oversimplyfying the 
matter ...
 
Regards
Fermin

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Peter Keel
Sent: Wed 10/29/03 19:48
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [swinog] Mailempfang wegen SPAM blockiert / Mail receipt because of Spam 
blocks



* on the Wed, Oct 29, 2003 at 06:27:12PM +0100, Fermin Sanchez wrote:
> Hm - pardon my asking, but: What (legal) reason should a dial-up
> user have to send mail over his own mail server? I don't see the
> problem in banning *dial-up*-ranges of providers which repeatedly
> fail to prevent spam from sometimes repeatedly the same sources.

Simple: Running an outgoing-Mailserver on its own. Why? ISPs got
to friggin keep the logs of who sent out mail from our servers
for _six_ month because some wannabe-gestapoheads decided so.
That's a pretty strong incentive to run your own mailserver.

Seegras
--
Those who give up essential liberties for temporary safety deserve
neither liberty nor safety. -- Benjamin Franklin
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