on Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 09:53:24AM -0800, Brandon Long via mailop wrote:
> You can treat these all as spam, and as misdirected mail, they are.  The
> problem is, they aren't usually of a volume that matters and using them to
> block the source is likely to have more false positives than not.  

We are good friends with the nice folks over at gamila, who made stuff
like the tea stick (they eventually sold the rights to the folks who
also make Bobbles, water bottles with built-in filters). They are known
as gamila now because their original name, gamil.com, was practically
impossible to use because, well, obvious reasons. 

I have champeon.com and regularly have to deal with presumably
intoxicated Latin Americans who think they are the champeon of the world
and sign up for facebook or twitter with an account in my domain. Shrug.
I reset their password and try to shut the accounts down when I can.

-- 
hesketh.com/inc. v: +1(919)834-2552 f: +1(919)834-2553 w: http://hesketh.com/
Internet security and antispam hostname intelligence: http://enemieslist.com/

_______________________________________________
mailop mailing list
mailop@mailop.org
https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop

Reply via email to