These spammers go through all this trouble to send us this crap...
The bayesian poisoning.
The images with the message.
Inviso-type...
the list goes on...
The one I've been seeing lately is a big text of jargon with an .jpg of a
topless lady with a stud in the backround
that says in the
- Original Message -
From: Ben Kamen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: mimedefang@lists.roaringpenguin.com
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 12:42 PM
Subject: [Mimedefang] Which is worse?
[snip]
The one I've been seeing lately is a big text of jargon with an .jpg of a
topless lady with a stud in
Dave Williss wrote:
The one I've been seeing lately is a big text of jargon with an .jpg
of a topless lady with a stud in the backround
that says in the image She's dreaming about a strong man... click to
find out more and you can't click it!
U And you tried to click on the
On Tue, Nov 29, 2005 at 03:59:10PM -0700, Ben Kamen wrote:
I was mousing over it to point it out to my friend and noticed the cursor
didn't change... i.e. the a href= tag was missing or malformed...
So we laughed.
But have you tried it with the most common configuration? Probably
a badly
Jan Pieter Cornet wrote:
On Tue, Nov 29, 2005 at 03:59:10PM -0700, Ben Kamen wrote:
I was mousing over it to point it out to my friend and noticed the cursor
didn't change... i.e. the a href= tag was missing or malformed...
So we laughed.
But have you tried it with the most common
Dave Williss wrote:
I think to myself... If I go out of my way to block spam, I'm probably
NOT going
to be inclined to buy anything from a spammer anyway. So why do they
bother?
Spam is usually blocked by sysadmins. They are attempting to bypass
that and reach end users that might be
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