Re: Preventing spammers from infiltrating the Red Hat mailing lists

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Paul Howarth wrote:

On Wed, 2005-04-13 at 12:36 -0400, William M. Quarles wrote:

I sent what I thought was a very important request to one of the Fedora
lists which was quickly beaten down, and I did not receive anything back
on subsequent replies.  I would appreciate your help in making sure that
the lists are safe for all of us.  I'm actually going to the trouble of
subscribing to nearly all of the Red Hat mailing lists just to get the
word out.

One thing that I have done recently was to search for my e-mail
addresses on the Internet web pages to find all of the places that list
them.  Why bother doing this?  Just like how Google has spiders that
crawl the Internet to gather general information, spammers have spiders
that crawl the Internet to gather e-mail addresses to spam people.  I
have contacted all of the websites who did not modify my e-mail
addresses (mostly on mailing lists) in such that they cannot be
collected.  Red Hat has done at least one thing right in that they have
modified everyone's e-mail address in their web archive, such that it
reads something like <walrus bellsouth.net> for mine.


Unfortunately google picked up 47 unmunged instances of your address so
for that particular address it's a lost cause. The cat is already out of
the bag and you won't be able to put it back in.

I'm working on it.

If you're going to post
to public mailing lists or otherwise "leak" your address on the
Internet, you need to either have decent spam filtering on your mailbox,
or use a disposable mail address such as a gmail account that you can
afford to discard if the spam load gets too big.
>
There's little point in pestering Red Hat to change the way that an
external organisation like gmane publishes data; that would be better
addressed to gmane but I still think it's a wasted effort.

Gmane will only do it at the list administrator's request. That's why I'm trying to rally some support.


fedora-list
is mirrored in many different places (e.g. fedoraforum.org,
homelinux.net and no doubt other places too). There is also nothing to
stop spammers joining the list and harvesting addresses posted to them
by the list contributors.

Spam is an unwelcome scourge on the Internet but munging addresses will
only slow down the rate at which you get spammed, it won't stop it.

Paul.


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