On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 3:29 PM, Bill Connelly billycarm...@verizon.net wrote:
How do you trace bad e-mails back to their origins? These things, mostly
VIAGRA ads, are also coming from the G3-G5 list, although I think this one
came from someone who has viewed my artsite recently. I usually
On Jan 25, 2010, at 4:14 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:
On Jan 25, 2010, at 1:29 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:
How do you trace bad e-mails back to their origins? These things,
mostly VIAGRA ads, are also coming from the G3-G5 list, although I
think this one came from someone who has viewed my
At 5:37 PM -0500 1/25/2010, John Musbach wrote:
If you google g3-5-list archive you can see that there are
multiple archives of this list being maintained apart from the
google groups archive
Whoa. I guess it makes sense that those would exist, but I had no
idea! Geeze, there's even an
On 1/25/10, Bill Connelly billycarm...@verizon.net wrote:
Any way to contact them back?
or just not the one?
as I posted, the spammers ip belongs to a brazillian cleaning product
company and along with my information is the phone number if the
technical contact. If you know how to speak their
At 8:21 PM -0500 1/25/2010, Bill Connelly wrote:
And 192.223.124.145
is according to ARIN (from whois.org):
ARIN is the American Registry of Internet Numbers. The IP in
question delegated to LACNIC (Latin American and Caribbean IP address
Regional Registry). So you have to query LACNIC
It may be worth a mention that my filters have been selecting Bill's
postings to the g3-5-list as junk mail. The server filters and my
mail client's filter are doing an excellent job. My filter is set to
training mode so I can see what's what. I have had to hit the not
junk icon at least half
On Jan 25, 2010, at 11:00 PM, roman...@ideal-access.com wrote:
It may be worth a mention that my filters have been selecting Bill's
postings to the g3-5-list as junk mail. The server filters and my
mail client's filter are doing an excellent job. My filter is set to
training mode so I can