On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 2:29 PM, a message from Courtney Homer
[EMAIL PROTECTED] was posted to the gnhlug-jobs mailing list.
It had no Linux-related content. She quickly followed up with an
apology to the list-owner address, saying she mistakenly sent her
message to the wrong list.
That list
I believe it's easy enough to setup mailman to require Linux in the body
of the message. This would deal with both spam and non-linux job apps. Add
a few other possible whitelist keywords (ie, Redhat, Fedora, Ubuntu, Suse,
Python, Ruby, PHP) and in the rejection message specify that only job
I think looking for various words can produce both false positives and
false negatives. And you still won't catch everything. Using your
abbreviated list as an example, there's no perl, open source, or
kernel keywords.
Also, not all jobs are technical (marketing, sales, ...) Not that we've
seen
On Sep 11, 2008, at 21:12, Bruce Dawson wrote:
Without a lot of AI, I think it would be more effective to just review
each message.
Would it be reasonable to give messages a pass based on a filter, and
require moderation if they fail that pass?
-Bill
-
Bill McGonigle, Owner
Bill McGonigle wrote:
On Sep 11, 2008, at 21:12, Bruce Dawson wrote:
Without a lot of AI, I think it would be more effective to just review
each message.
Would it be reasonable to give messages a pass based on a filter, and
require moderation if they fail that pass?
-Bill
Sure; for now.
[reply to multiple messages]
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 6:09 PM, Ted Roche [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And it was an on-topic post, in the sense it was for a computer
technician.
The list charter is quite explict about requiring Linux. If
someone wants Dice.com, they know where to find it. :)