It is rumored that on or about 2002-05-10 3:07 PM -0400, Bill Cole 
wrote as follows:
>At 2:55 PM -0400 5/10/02, Neil Herber  imposed structure on a stream 
>of electrons, yielding:
>>The router appears to operate on addresses regardless of the 
>>direction of the mail.
>
>Yep.
>
>>Is there some way around this? Listing the addresses explicitly 
>>will not work because I actually have to send mail to 
>>[EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], and [EMAIL PROTECTED] from time to time.
>
>I don't think you can do what you want to do with SIMS. The 
>semantics of the router don't extend to "this address is bogus 
>unless I want it not to be."
>
>
>--
>Bill Cole
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Bill

Thanks for your reply. Unfortunately dashes my hopes of clobbering 
these spammers. Since the mail is forwarded to my SIMS by a trusted 
source (it is not an open relay) is there any type of SIMS feature I 
can use to detect inbound mail that one hop ago came from a known 
spammer? Or is mail that is forwarded by alias servers doomed to 
always be accepted?

-- 
Neil

Neil Herber, RGD
Corporate info at http://www.eton.ca/
Eton Systems, 15 Pinepoint Drive, Nepean, ON, Canada K2H 6B1
Tel: (613) 829-4668


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