At 03:44 PM 4/24/01, Frank Tegtmeyer wrote:
>Todd Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > On an ezmlm list, stripping MIME attachments is as simple as ...
>
>To be exact: that's only possible with ezmlm-idx.
Yes, my bad.
Todd
Todd Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On an ezmlm list, stripping MIME attachments is as simple as ...
To be exact: that's only possible with ezmlm-idx.
Regards, Frank
On Tue, Apr 24, 2001 at 11:51:02AM -0600,
Andy Bradford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 08:35:10 CDT, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
>
> > It isn't my list, but if it was I would add the IP addresses of any servers
> > that sent a virus warning to my list into my tcp rules block list.
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 08:35:10 CDT, Bruno Wolff III wrote:
> It isn't my list, but if it was I would add the IP addresses of any servers
> that sent a virus warning to my list into my tcp rules block list.
Unfortunately that won't work. The email is sent to a list exploder
and never directly del
At 09:54 AM 4/24/01, Brett Randall wrote:
>Or simply strip the attachments to any messages... That'd be my ideal
>choice. Keep the list relatively text-only (HTML to some degree), have
>no virii problems and keep total bandwidth usage down. Overheads are
>obvious, but at least for each e-mail to t
Robin S. Socha([EMAIL PROTECTED])@2001.04.24 09:59:25 +:
> we have a clear case of MCSE, but that's no reason to punish the users
> of that server.
MCSE = management can't send email (?)
;-)
>
> Again: the problem is on the server side (i.e. "administrators" running
> Exchange on Win2k or wh
* Bruno Wolff III <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010424 09:31]:
> It isn't my list, but if it was I would add the IP addresses of any servers
> that sent a virus warning to my list into my tcp rules block list.
Well, this one "feature" in Windows has created more traffic than qmail
over the last 24h. Anywa
> "Bruno" == Bruno Wolff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It isn't my list, but if it was I would add the IP addresses of any servers
> that sent a virus warning to my list into my tcp rules block list.
Or simply strip the attachments to any messages... That'd be my ideal
choice. Keep the list
It isn't my list, but if it was I would add the IP addresses of any servers
that sent a virus warning to my list into my tcp rules block list.