Personally, I'd love to see some company (OpenSRS, in this case) sue XV.NET for forging OpenSRS's domain in headers (and/or the SMTP envelope)
That's just me though. Spam costs me enough on a daily basis in terms of time and bandwidth, and cost shifting the load is unacceptable. Moreso, anyone willfully forging headers should not be allowed to continue on the public internet. -- Dave Warren, Email Address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cell: (403) 371-3470 Fax: (403) 371-3471 Toll free: (888) 371-3470 Vonage: (817) 886-0860 ICQ: 17848192 AIM: devilspgd Yahoo!: devilspgd MSN/PASSPORT: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Lynn W. Taylor wrote: > Unfortunately, it says it's from OpenSRS. That's a real problem. > > On Mon, 2 Feb 2004 16:57:20 -0500 (EST), [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> FYI. >> >> I used XV.NET to request confirmation from any sender. XV.NET >> confirm all incoming mails before it will send to my inbox. >> >> This is NOT from [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> >> Sorry for inconvenience. >> >> Best regards, >> Emil >> >> www.needguide.com >> >> >>> Of course, 99% of the spam we receive is from addresses mined from >>> the web-based archive of this and other lists. >>> >>> So, pardon me from mentioning [EMAIL PROTECTED] but at least >>> that will now get spidered along with my legit. address and >>> possibly cut down on the garbage. >>> >>> -- Lynn >>> >>> On Mon, 2 Feb 2004 12:31:24 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>>> Yes it is, it allows OpenSRS to filter our Spam from their mailing >>>> lists... >>>> ----- Original Message ----- >>>> From: "Nicolas Ross" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>>> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>>> Sent: Monday, February 02, 2004 11:11 AM >>>> Subject: Fw: Please confirm your email for [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>>> >>>> >>>>> What's this ? >>>>> >>>>> Is this legitimate ? >>>>> -- Dave Warren, Email Address: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cell: (403) 371-3470 Fax: (403) 371-3471 Toll free: (888) 371-3470 Vonage: (817) 886-0860 ICQ: 17848192 AIM: devilspgd Yahoo!: devilspgd MSN/PASSPORT: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
