On Sun, 29 Apr 2001, Adam Bailey wrote: > ... A single forged spam run of several million pieces could > knock an innocent party off of the Internet when AOL floods > them in bounces. Thus, AOL just drops it. If someone is running an open relay that's being hijacked by spammers, they aren't exactly what I would call innocent. Perhaps they're not malicious but at the very least they are negligent. I doubt AOL is dropping bounces out of kindness. - murr -
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed David W. Tamkin
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed J C Lawrence
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed murr rhame
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Roger Burton West
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed John R Levine
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed J C Lawrence
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Adam Bailey
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Adam Bailey
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed murr rhame
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Alan Clegg
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed murr rhame
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed John R Levine
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Russ Allbery
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Charlie Summers
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Bernie Cosell
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed John R Levine
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Steve Werby
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Chuck Rice
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Nick Simicich
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Adam Bailey
- Re: AOL Terms -- Revealed Russ Allbery
