On 08/19/2017 08:31 AM, Steve Wehr wrote:
>
> Some further info... I was including a link at the bottom of all emails sent
> by mailman (in the msg_footer field:
> "Click this link to unsubscribe:
> %(user_optionsurl)s?password=%(user_password)s&unsub=1&unsubconfirm=1"
>
> I thought perhaps use
___
> > Steve Wehr
> > Tunedin Web Design
> >
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Keith Seyffarth [mailto:w...@weif.net]
> > Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2017 10:55 AM
> > To: Steve Wehr
> > Cc: mailman-users@python.org
> > Subject: Re
Is it possible that others sharing the same ISP could have been
spam-marking and this has led to other subs on ISP getting removed?
I had a spate of nyu.edu unsubs a while back that and that seemed to
possibly be the case. I had to resub people using alt emails.
On Sat, Aug 19, 2017 at 10:55 AM
Julian H. Stacey writes:
> Some people are clueless thus forward without pruning.
While I strongly agree with you that pruning is a great idea, and
award bonus points to those who prune, I think "clueless" is unfair.
Granted, "leaking" personalized links is a pretty serious issue and
people "sho
In article <7e0bd0e4-b837-4d76-3c14-a0b6dfda9...@tnetconsulting.net> you write:
>-=-=-=-=-=-
>-=-=-=-=-=-
>
>On 08/21/2017 02:08 PM, John Levine wrote:
>> which defines a one-click opt-out link that uses POST rather than GET,
>> since the URL malware fetchers all do GETs.
>
>Why do single click? W
On 08/21/2017 02:08 PM, John Levine wrote:
There are plenty of anti-spam schemes that fetch all the URLs in a
message to see whether they're malicious. That's why ESPs usually
have a landing page with a confirm link, and why we wrote RFC 8058
which defines a one-click opt-out link that uses POST
In article <201708210145.v7l1io7x003...@fire.js.berklix.net> you write:
>> Maybe this would foil ISPs who are automatically following this link to
>> unsubscribe people. Do ISPs really do this?
There are plenty of anti-spam schemes that fetch all the URLs in a
message to see whether they're malici
"Steve Wehr" wrote:
> That's the best theory I have heard so far to explain the facts.
>
> The user's in question, who are being unsubscribed without asking to be, are
> people who like the mailing lists they are on, and would not be flagging
> emails from the list as spam. Now their ISP might, b
t; unsubscribe people. Do ISPs really do this?
>
> _
> Steve Wehr
> Tunedin Web Design
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Keith Seyffarth [mailto:w...@weif.net]
> Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2017 10:55 AM
> To: Steve Wehr
> Cc: mailman-users@python
k to
unsubscribe people. Do ISPs really do this?
_
Steve Wehr
Tunedin Web Design
-Original Message-
From: Keith Seyffarth [mailto:w...@weif.net]
Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2017 10:55 AM
To: Steve Wehr
Cc: mailman-users@python.org
Subject: Re: [Mailman-Users] Users being u
On Aug 19, 2017, at 8:27 AM, Steve Wehr wrote:
subscribe:Aug 18 00:41:10 2017 (22583) saintsofswing: deleted
dorrainescofi...@gmail.com; via the member options page
Steve, if this was done via the web interface the first thing I would do is get
the date/timestamp for the log entry “deleted
"Steve Wehr" writes:
> The problem is that when contacted, these users swear they DID NOT
> unsubscribe themselves. So how can they be getting unsubscribed (with
> messages in the logs like the one above) but they are not going to the
> member options page and unsubscribing??
One possibility w
12 matches
Mail list logo