On 4/14/19 8:40 PM, Eric Tykwinski wrote:
We received something rather strange, basically normal spam but a lot of
attachments, like 10 to 12 jpgs, or sometimes txt attachments.
Seems like a buffer overflow or something that’s not effecting us and I
haven’t heard anything from clients, but just
I've seen sig lines with a dozen images.
--
Joe Hamelin, W7COM, Tulalip, WA, +1 (360) 474-7474
On Sun, Apr 14, 2019 at 7:47 PM Eric Tykwinski
wrote:
> We received something rather strange, basically normal spam but a lot of
> attachments, like 10 to 12 jpgs, or sometimes txt attachments.
> Seem
We received something rather strange, basically normal spam but a lot of
attachments, like 10 to 12 jpgs, or sometimes txt attachments.
Seems like a buffer overflow or something that’s not effecting us and I haven’t
heard anything from clients, but just wondering if this is something new going
o
On 4/14/19 12:04 PM, Sébastien Riccio wrote:
> Hello mailop,
>
> We're a "small" internet service provider in Switzerland and are running mail
> services for our customers.
>
> Since a long time, customers are complaining that the mail they send are
> always getting to junk folder at outlook.co
In article <6.2.5.6.2.20190412140425.11823...@elandnews.com> you write:
>At 05:12 PM 10-04-2019, Grant Taylor via mailop wrote:
>>The back story in this case involved two such systems that were
>>naively replying to each others no-reply address.
>>
>>I'm used to things like Auto-Generated: and X-L
Hello mailop,
We're a "small" internet service provider in Switzerland and are running mail
services for our customers.
Since a long time, customers are complaining that the mail they send are always
getting to junk folder at outlook.com (no issues with gmail for example).
We give a lot of tim