On Mon, 01 Oct 2001 11:40:57 BST, Alex Hunsley writes: <from a non-faked address, indeed> >Robert Waldner wrote: >> And for [EMAIL PROTECTED]: well, you obviously need a more >> reliable way to bloody *always* include your .sig... Btw, is >> privacy.com your domain or are you affiliated? I'd guess no, and they >> probably be won't be too happy about you forging an address of theirs, >> what with them having to handle all the bounces and such... >> I own a >> domain which is a target for such utterly clue- and witless fraud >> myself and have actually *sued* someone for forging addresses, y'know. > >This is getting too personal and unpleasant and so this is the point >where I unsubscribe.
Why? I didn't say (or mean!) to sue _you_. (I wouldn't be entitled to do, you're not trespassing (sp?) on my rights here). And for unsubscribing here: - I'm only one person, if you have problems with me, say so, I'll just do the equivalent of killfiling you. - if you use debian, it's probably a quite good idea to participate here - as for unpleasant: that's just life, I'm afraid. >Robert, chill the fsck out. I'm not saying don't point these things out, >just watch the vitriol. And I thought I'd watched my temper. Ok, maybe I overreacted. `xcuse, please. But maybe a little discussion of /why/ faking otherwise valid addresses is a Very Bad Idea. Let me tell you a story, just because I know this very example best: I own/have a domain. There is the possibility in local slang to read it as "didn't do it". So, some (IMO) morons come and put something like "[EMAIL PROTECTED]'t do it" in web-forms, using "[EMAIL PROTECTED]'t do it" as faked email-addresses and such. At one point I had to handle approx. 40 mails each day (not really counting spam, I've got pretty effective filters there) per *day*. But I never knew who was using my address ("[EMAIL PROTECTED]'t do it" in that case). S/he did a pretty effective job of only using a certain, very abuse-wise unresponsive ISP. But one day, after about a year, s/he made a mistake. Even from the same country as I am, used the address via a local ISP. So what should I have done? I filed a proper complaint (which is equivalent to fraud), and s/he got fined. That's fine with me, s/he was harrassing me for almost a year. And cost me money, I pay for my traffic. So my opinion is: if you really think it's effective to use a fake address (I doubt that), please make sure that you don't simply put the load on someone else. cheers, &rw -- -- Blessed are the PHBs-who-do-not-understand-hardware, for they can be -- coerced into signing for upgrades to make life a bit more tolerable
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