Colin A. Bartlett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I hate spam. But I love marketing to my clients with email. Many of
> my clients do the same and some of them express concern that their
> messages could get filtered. I think this COULD BE used for
> legitimate purposes. Don't you think Amazon or BUY.COM, both of which
> send out a mountain legitimate correspondence look at probabilities
> of their messages being filtered? And also ensure they're not
> erroneously blacklisted?

Most legitimate companies will tell their customers that they need
mofify their whitelist to allow for these non-spam, but spammy looking,
messages.  I know I would much rather whitelist the 3-4 companies I deal
with online rather than muck with the rules which otherwise work very
well.


--�

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Chris Barnes                                 AOL IM: CNBarnes
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                      Yahoo IM: chrisnbarnes
Computer Systems Manager                         ph: 979-845-7801
Department of Physics                           fax: 979-845-2590
Texas A&M University



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