Stan Hoeppner: > Matthias Andree put forth on 11/18/2010 4:23 AM: > > Am 18.11.2010 01:28, schrieb Stan Hoeppner: > >> Subject: > >> =?iso-8859-1?Q?Le_invitamos_a_asistir_a_la_Presentaci=F3n_de_la_Oportunid?= > >> > >> =?iso-8859-1?Q?ad_de_negocio_en_ACN_Marketing_y_Servicios_de_Telecomunica?= > >> =?iso-8859-1?Q?ciones?= > >> > >> Does anyone have a header_checks pcre that would allow me to reject or > >> discard any email with an encoded subject such as, but not limited to, > >> that above. I.e. non plain text? > >> > >> I can't recall ever receiving legit email with an encoded subject, only > >> spam. > > > > Oh, then why does your mailer encode your mail body as ISO-8859-1? I > > might argue that only spam would contain that. Your mail body does not > > bear any non-ASCII characters. > > Maybe I'm using the wrong terminology, or not explaining my case clearly. > > > What I mean is that it's not spam because it's encoded. I've seen KOI8-R > > declared on legit pure-ASCII mail, and it wasn't spam. Not to say I > > have seen lots of broken mailers that get MIME encoding wrong. It's > > subtle enough that many software packages break in corner cases. > > What I mean is that all email I receive that has the contents of the > Subject: header encoded is spam. You may be misunderstanding my logic > here. At this site, we have no correspondence with non-English language > composing senders. The fact that the Subject: header lines are encoded > probably has much more to do with the email being composed in a language > that requires special characters. This in itself does not make an email > spam. But the fact that we don't receive legit mail composed in > non-English languages does make it spam. For instance, I recently > received spam in Spanish and Cyrillic, through two different hacked > webmail accounts in two countries, Spain and Russia, both with encoded > Subject: headers. > > Does my motivation here make more sense now?
It makes sense when you never exchange email with people outside the US-ASCII and EBCDIC world. I suppose that covers people across the USA, and/or people who use dynosaur systems. Wietse