This, along with other similar such things, should be a total embarrassment
to the list administrators and operators.
I am a member of about 40 different mailing lists dealing with different
open-source software. Why is it that this is the only one which allows this
crap to make it through?
Cons
On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 11:44:24AM -0400, Mark Nernberg wrote:
> Considering that Project Cyrus aims to produce "secure" software, the total
> lack of even basic anti-virus screening on the listserve (or, if there is
> screening, the total failure of it), reeks of laziness on the part of the
> syst
The problem is that this crap comes through the Cyrus lists all the time!
If it were once, I'd keep my mouth shut.
And, don't give me that TrendMicro/ClamAV crap -- quality attachment
filtering and simply disallowing attachments to the list would nip
that in the bud.
On 5/30/05, Andreas S. Kerbe
Well, I supose the list is not tightly controlled. But is unfair to
equate openness to insecurity. Imap-Sasl it is not a MTA and does not
relay anything. It would be nice to protect windows users a little more
but this implies more hardware resources. I think that attachment
prohibitioin is too
On Mon, 2005-05-30 at 16:01 -0400, Mark Nernberg wrote:
> The problem is that this crap comes through the Cyrus lists all the time!
>
> If it were once, I'd keep my mouth shut.
>
> And, don't give me that TrendMicro/ClamAV crap -- quality attachment
> filtering and simply disallowing attachments
--On Tuesday, May 31, 2005 11:47 AM +0200 Marco Colombo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Server-side global content-based filtering is silly, unless of course
it's your (private) server. Users are expected to do their own
filtering, otherwise they're exposed anyway. Server-side filtering (on
publi
On Tue, 2005-05-31 at 09:59 -0400, Joseph Brennan wrote:
>
> --On Tuesday, May 31, 2005 11:47 AM +0200 Marco Colombo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
> > Server-side global content-based filtering is silly, unless of course
> > it's your (private) server. Users are expected to do their own
> > fil
On Mon, 30 May 2005, Mark Nernberg wrote:
This, along with other similar such things, should be a total embarrassment
to the list administrators and operators.
I hear cmu is hiring if you'd like to fix it. Your email address suggests
you're local.
Considering that Project Cyrus aims to pro