On Monday 13 March 2006 06:01, Dan Track wrote: >Hi > >Can someone, Administrator, please delist the person above. > >Basically everytime I send a message to this list the person keeps >sending me antispam notices. Its ridiculous. Given that this account >is dedicated to fedora lists, its impossible to be listed as a spam >address. > >Its so annoying for me, and I'm sure other people are suffering > aswell. No, most of us are not. Since this responder doesn't preserve enough of the message headers to allow the perp to be identified by any means but a customized subject line per list subscriber, and I understand this was done once on one of the lists, and that sub then canceled, but he was back within 24 hours, probably with a different name. This could, I assume, be put into a script and made automatic, to be run in the middle of the night when things are slow, but hasn't been for unk reasons. Each of those C/R's is a bit over 4kb, so it is a waste of bandwidth, but uol.com.br actually sells this as a value added service & doesn't care if its an inconvienience and resource waster for the rest of the planet. We just filter it to /dev/null with procmail. I hope that there is justice in this somewhere and that the perp is not getting ANY messages from the mailing lists he is harrassing, FWIW this one is not the only one. What I suspect is happening is that he is getting them ok, but is auto forwarding them to this other account, which does generate the C/R. My thoughts on someone doing that and not understanding the 'side effect' of doing it relate pointedly to his geneology and aren't printable in mixed company. FWIW, here is the procmail recipe I use: ----- :0: * ^From: AntiSpam UOL <.*@uol.com.br> /dev/null # /$HOME/mail/uol_crap ----- Move the comment character # up one line if you want to save a copy of it, but it WILL be 100's of kilobytes in a week. I suppose one could write a crontab rule to delete it and re-touch it weekly/daily/hourly, but /dev/null is just so handy IMO. -- Cheers, Gene People having trouble with vz bouncing email to me should add the word 'online' between the 'verizon', and the dot which bypasses vz's stupid bounce rules. I do use spamassassin too. :-) Yahoo.com and AOL/TW attorneys please note, additions to the above message by Gene Heskett are: Copyright 2006 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.