WOW full of yourself much. Many of us use gmail and others to manage the load of mail we received from various lists. I doubt we anyone needs your sympathies, Good luck getting assistance from the list in the future, but I doubt you need it, you see to be able to do everything on your own.
-jim On Wed, Sep 29, 2010 at 8:22 AM, Ronald F. Guilmette <r...@tristatelogic.com>wrote: > > Heath Jones <hj1...@gmail.com> wrote: > > >Out of curiosity, what led you to this conclusion? > > A number of factors, actually. > > Although I had started to type up a lengthy and elaborate response to > your eminently reasonable question, on second thought, I don't think > that I actually want to go into detail on this case, as anything I > might say as regards to how I detected this would just allow future > hijackers to evade me that much more effectively. > > So I'm sorry to be giving you a non-answer, but actually, I think that's > best for now. > > In any case, further discussion of this particular case now appears to > be moot. As of now, it appears that AS11296 is no longer announcing any > routes at all, so I'm assuming that Nishant Ramachandran (Xeex/AS27524) > and/or whoever else may have been involved in this has now been adequately > spanked. (And my personal thanks go out to whoever did that.) > > > Regards, > rfg > > > P.S. Yes, I actually _am_ blocking inbound e-mail from google/gmail. > Too much spam from there, and far too little action to correct the > abundant problem(s). (Can you spell E-V-I-L?) Also blocked here: > Yahoo and Hotmail, for the same reasons. (To big to fail? No. Just > too big to care. They don't need me, and I sure as hell don't need > them.) > > I guess you don't have a real mail server of your own that you can use. > For that, you have my sympathies. > >