If anyone here works for Cloudflare or has high-level personal contacts
there, could you contact me offlist? Thanks!
--
John Hardin KA7OHZhttp://www.impsec.org/~jhardin/
jhar...@impsec.orgFALaholic #11174 pgpk -a jhar...@impsec.org
key: 0xB8732E79 -- 2D8C 34F4 6411
On 9/4/2018 10:57 AM, RW wrote:
> My understanding is that for historic reasons there is heavy use of
> 'use byte', so SpamAssassin sees text as a series of bytes in whatever
> character set it's written in. normalize_charset allows text to be
> converted to UTF-8, which makes it easier to match by
On Sun, 02 Sep 2018 00:02:45 -0400
Bill Cole wrote:
> On 1 Sep 2018, at 18:22 (-0400), David B Funk wrote:
>
> > On the other-hand, if you want to decode the subject line and then
> > pattern-match against all the possible UTF-8 emojies, you're going
> > to end up with a rather unwieldy rule.
I receive emails containing these emojis in subjects regularly. I often found
them annoying and common in spam and wondered about catching then just as the
original poster requested. But then I looked further and see them often used
in genuine emails also. Famously twitter uses these emojis as
On Monday, September 3, 2018, 6:52:25 PM GMT+2, Antony Stone
wrote:
>It still sounds like a strange way of identifying spam to me:
>1. surely there are far stronger indicators in the Received headers and/or the
>body itself
>2. people are going to be using glyphs such as this more and more