On 29 May 2020, at 11:11, Benny Pedersen wrote:
> On 2020-05-29 17:40, @lbutlr wrote:
>
>> I can't just blacklist the IPs because some people want these emails.
>
> http://squirrelmail.org/ have support for list-* headers
They generally do not have list headers, of course. At least not
List-un
On 29 May 2020, at 10:57, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
> "an e-mail recipient cannot be required to pay a fee, provide information
> other than his or her e-mail address and opt-out preferences, or take any
> steps other than sending a reply e-mail message or visiting a single Internet
> Web p
Personally,
I mark and categorize them as SPAM, IF they do not have 1-2 clicks
unsubscribing. Then they are spam.
99% of the times these are senders who opt you in automatically to few lists
without double opt-in whilst never giving you a choice of what to ask for, or
even when they do, they
On 2020-05-29 17:40, @lbutlr wrote:
I can't just blacklist the IPs because some people want these emails.
http://squirrelmail.org/ have support for list-* headers
round-cube and others web-mail missing it, oh dear is software from 2011
still stable ?
@lbutlr wrote:
> How do people deal with lists that a user subscribed to that require
> logging in to an account to unsubscribe? I seem to be seeing a lot
> more complaints from users who cannot get off lists (probably because
> they didn't realize they were creating an account for getting
> multip
> Really? Does it specific that the user dodoesn’t have to be logged in to the
> site?
>
> Do you have the law handy, I'd like to add it to some boilerplate.
It was part of the FTC's 2008 update to CAN-SPAM, using their rulemaking
authority, so it's not directly in the text of the original C
On 29 May 2020, at 10:16, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
>> Probably not, but the user doesn't care, just wants the mail gone and to
>> stop showing up. Telling them to go to the site, jump through password
>> recovery hoop and then unsubscribe (which on some sites is quite difficult,
>> as you
> Probably not, but the user doesn't care, just wants the mail gone and to stop
> showing up. Telling them to go to the site, jump through password recovery
> hoop and then unsubscribe (which on some sites is quite difficult, as you
> will be signed up for 5 or 6 different mailings, each of wh
On 29 May 2020, at 09:51, Antony Stone
wrote:
> On Friday 29 May 2020 at 17:40:42, @lbutlr wrote:
>> How do people deal with lists that a user subscribed to that require
>> logging in to an account to unsubscribe?
>
> Well, as you say in your Subject, this isn't spam; it's just email that the
>
On Friday 29 May 2020 at 17:40:42, @lbutlr wrote:
> How do people deal with lists that a user subscribed to that require
> logging in to an account to unsubscribe?
Well, as you say in your Subject, this isn't spam; it's just email that the
user asked for but has decided they no longer want.
> M
How do people deal with lists that a user subscribed to that require logging in
to an account to unsubscribe? I seem to be seeing a lot more complaints from
users who cannot get off lists (probably because they didn't realize they were
creating an account for getting multiple-mails per day).
Mo
On 2020-05-28 15:32, Bert Van de Poel wrote:
Almost all of the email we process are forwarders. It doesn't really
make sense for us to do a non-global bayes db. The large majority of
email we process is also for a uniform group: student organizations at
our local university.
On 28.05.20 21:05,
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