They did not respond to the key problems: they still allow their systems to 
host zipped malware, they allow their clients to upload it, they allow the 
delivery of mass mail with a link to their hosted malware. These three problems 
are still in place. Stopping specific clients will not prevent future damage. 
Finally, the recipients who are now dealing with the MailChimp-hosted 
ramsomware should class-action against it, and make MailChimp pay through the 
nose.

Sent from ProtonMail Mobile

On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 10:38 PM, Anne P. Mitchell Esq. <amitch...@isipp.com> 
wrote:

> MailChimp has said that they believe that they have terminated all accounts 
> that were responsible for this. BUT, they say, this is a group that keeps 
> cropping up (think whack-a-mole), so to please report any more of these that 
> anyone receives. Anne Anne P. Mitchell, Attorney at Law Author: Section 6 of 
> the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law) Legislative Consultant 
> CEO/President, Institute for Social Internet Public Policy Legal Counsel: The 
> CyberGreen Institute Member, Cal. Bar Cyberspace Law Committee Member, 
> Colorado Cyber Committee Member, Elevations Credit Union Member Council 
> Member, Board of Directors, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop Ret. Professor of 
> Law, Lincoln Law School of San Jose Ret. Chair, Asilomar Microcomputer 
> Workshop

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