Yes, there are ways of managing it. And that's what we're doing on the bootstrap-users group. This group was probably started by the creators of Bootstrap, and they are quite busy these days. I offered to take care of managing the group, but never heard back from them.
Bruce, I would ask that you consider switching over to bootstrap-users. A quick look will demonstrate that we are in fact more active than this group, and without a trace of the bizarre spam which unfortunately continues to plague this group. We actually started to receive the spam on the other group, but since we moderate our incoming messages for new users, it got deleted without ever being posted. I've got nothing but love for the Bootstrap guys. Its value—in terms of what I've learned about CSS while using it—can't be understated. I'd ask that people be understanding to the fact that their time is limited, and just come over to bootstrap-users group. On Tuesday, October 1, 2013 2:02:44 AM UTC-4, Bruce Ho wrote: > > say they even responded to this thread. > > I don't want to sound like I know how to do it. But given this is a google > forum, aren't there the usu defensive means for tackling spamming, such as > a simple spam filtering. I do see a lot of offensive words being used > repeatedly. Or maybe you have tried and they are actually sophisticated > enough to slip past the filter? > > worst case, turn on capcha. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "twitter-bootstrap" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
