On Sun, 18 Aug 2002 16:55, Jason Lim wrote: > > Large multinational firms get to choose their own policy for spam > > blocking, > > they don't let an ISP tell them what to do. All you need is a MD of a > > company they do business with being unable to send an email to the MD of > > their company and heads will roll. > > > > If you want to persue your crusade against spam blocking then finding an > > incidence of it affecting a multinational is a good way to start. > > In reality, since the multinational will control all the email servers > that email passes through, they certainly wouldn't use an RBL that blocks > themselves.
Or organizations that they regard as important... > So... if suppose for people that do not send email to/from Asia, blocking > ALL of Asia off wouldn't make the slightest difference to them. So hence > RBLs that block all of Asia may indeed block out a lot of spam because > American spammers are abusing the Asian servers/networks. > > However, for people that do communicate with Asia a lot, aggressive RBLs > that liberally block Asian ISPs and networks just do not cut it. osirusoft > is one that we will not use because of this. > > > I invite you to see someone else trying to get off an RBL through NANAE... > and see how wonderful the people are at NANAE: What do you expect? The way to get off the black list is to stop spammers. Also it would be good to see a response from you to Jules regarding the "Zentek (Jason Lim) is a spam-house, Iadvantage tolerates spammers" issue. -- I do not get viruses because I do not use MS software. If you use Outlook then please do not put my email address in your address-book so that WHEN you get a virus it won't use my address in the >From field.