I hate spam. Spam and eggs for breakfast; spam and cheese for lunch; spam, spam and spam for dinner. I'm sick of spam. I think what might be a better solution, is to have an allowed/refused ruleset. This would work like this, refuse from the spamming domains unless there is a specific from address that is allowed. This gives you the best of both worlds, refusing spam on a domain basis, but allowing registered individuals through. JMHO, Brian > -----Original Message----- > From: mike neuliep [mailto:mike@illiana.net] > Sent: Friday, September 21, 2001 9:03 AM > To: kclug@kclug.org > Subject: spam revisited > > > Hello, I am interested in knowning how the list members feel > about spam. I've > been receiving an increasing amount of spam in my personal > mail box lately and > I have been looking into something more radical than a merely > an access list > of common spammers. I'm considering a commercial service > that works with sendmail > that incrementally downloads an abuse list daily and will > reject e-mail from those > domains of known spammers. This will undoubtedly block many > of the large ISP > and free e-mail services too such as hotmail, yahoo-mail and > aol. I am quite > aware that some of our members use these services to post to > the group. I'm > hoping you guys could help me weigh the benefits and pitfalls > of such a system. > One thing is for sure though, manual additions to the access > database take up > time that I could be doing better things and it is probably > not the best solution > to our problem. > > Thanks in advance, > > Mike Neuliep > > > > majordomo@kclug.org >