On Thu, 12 Jul 2018 16:28:01 -0400, "Eric Tykwinski" <eric-l...@truenet.com> wrote:
>I really hope your wrong, since it's in their FAQs. >https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Deal-with-abuse-phishing-or-spoofing-in-Outlook-com-0d882ea5-eedc-4bed-aebc-079ffa1105a3 > >Reporting abuse > > If you're being threatened, call your local law enforcement. > > To report harassment, impersonation, child exploitation, child > pornography, or other illegal activities received via an Outlook.com account, > forward the offending email as an attachment to ab...@outlook.com. Include > any relevant info, such as the number of times you've received messages from > the account and the relationship, if any, between you and the sender. Note, however, that this documents how customers should handle abusive communications received by a customer, not non-customers receiving abusive traffic sent by a customer. We did handle a fair bit of the former, but the reports came from senior execs' telephones ringing, not reports to abuse@. I was in the group that should have received reports of abusive traffic leaving Microsoft's networks. I made myself more than a little unpopular by raising sand about what, from inside the organization, appeared to be a total indifference to ab...@microsoft.com and presumably allied abuse@ accounts. The insistance that there needed to be a knowledgeable Policy Enforcement organization was tut-tutted away. mdr -- "There are no laws here, only agreements." -- Masahiko _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop