On 02/25/2016 09:12 AM, Fred Cisin wrote:
...
95% of the enormous volume of spam that I receive is for them. For years, I assumed honest stupid mistake and I forwarded misaddressed mail to them, and notified senders (mostly "current hotlist of candidates"), until those headhunters started adding ME to their mailing lists, and it became clear that xenosoft.us was still giving out wrong address, and not making a good faith effort to get it right. Kinda a very mild DDOS attack. (don't like somebody? put their address on mailing lists, that sell to other mailing lists, . . . )
I started to learn .procmailrc, . . .


--
Grumpy Ol' Fred             ci...@xenosoft.com


Want to talk SPAM? My company used to have the domain 'ao.com'. We had it from the days BEFORE you need to pay for domain names - back when you registered with email forms... And back BEFORE 'aol.com'. Back *before* SPAM.

It's amazing how much SPAM and misdirected email can come from people who can't seem to the 'l' on 'aol'...

We had two machines running constantly just filtering and re-directing - we never figured out a way to get aol to pay for this service... So eventually they just went in the bit bucket. Most of it was SPAM for aol customers...

At the point where we finally sold the domain to be rid of this issue (and make a few $) we were processing in excess of *300000* messages a day. This is for a 7 person company. It was more than 50% of the email processed by our ISP. Our DSL router throttled the SMTP requests so we could SOME work done during the day. Probably never caught up. Averaged about 10 per second during the peak period - throttled to about 2 during our work day and all hell busted loose at night.

Our wires today are about at least 20x faster, so it would probably have been at least 20x more...

I hate SPAM.

-Gary

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