On Sat, 21 Oct 2017 19:28:14 +0100
Groach wrote:
> Im concerned they have done it deliberately to harvest email
> addresses.
Unlikely. It's very easy to get lists of addresses used to post to
mailing lists without being subscribed. Even if you can't think of an
efficient way of doing it, you can
On 10/21/2017 2:28 PM, Groach wrote:
Im concerned they have done it deliberately to harvest email addresses.
Perhaps. I've reached out to the CEO and left a v/m at their west coast
office.
Im concerned they have done it deliberately to harvest email addresses.
On 21/10/2017 19:20, Kevin A. McGrail wrote:
On 10/21/2017 11:57 AM, Bill Cole wrote:
It would be a good idea to figure out what subscribed address is
causing these and unsubscribe that address (and ban it) from the list.
On 10/21/2017 11:57 AM, Bill Cole wrote:
It would be a good idea to figure out what subscribed address is
causing these and unsubscribe that address (and ban it) from the list.
Agreed. I'm just saying it's not time to raise the panic flag :-)
On 21 Oct 2017, at 9:55 (-0400), Kevin A. McGrail wrote:
I got one as well. I imagine it's someone using freshdesk for service
management. Just file and forget. I don't think it's anything too
stupid or spam.
I dissent. :)
Subscribing an address that delivers into a SM system that autocre
I got one as well. I imagine it's someone using freshdesk for service
management. Just file and forget. I don't think it's anything too stupid or
spam.
Regards,
KAM
On October 21, 2017 9:49:52 AM EDT, Groach
wrote:
>Yesterday I replied to the spamassassin mailinglist (I actually replied
>
>
Yesterday I replied to the spamassassin mailinglist (I actually replied
twice - with 2 different sender addresses by mistake).
Can anyone tell me why I then received 2x emails from 'freshdesk.com'
claiming to have created an account for those two addresses (see quote
below)?
Ive written to t