On Donnerstag, 8. Juni 2006 17:33 Gary V wrote:
> What's surprising is that you are surprised that someone can make
> mail appear to come from you. There is nothing stopping them.
That's not true: SPF. Of course, only if the recipient checks for SPF
records, but lots of sites check it now (anyway
ges over 10.5 weeks.)
{^_^} Joanne
- Original Message -
From: "NW7US, Tomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY
as NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS one, is that
it seems to actually be FROM me!!!
To:
Subject: Re: Another example...
Date: Thu, 8 Jun 2006 00:45:46 -0700
>I'm semi-asleep at the switch. The autolearn=no means you do indeed
>have Bayes turned off or completely untrained. Very seriously, a well
>trained Bayes is your BEST spam fighting friend. So are the rule sets
&g
Looks like you have [EMAIL PROTECTED] whitelisted somewhere. That's
probably a bad idea. Spam usually uses a spoofed address.
NW7US, Tomas wrote:
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY as
NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS one, is th
Looks like you have [EMAIL PROTECTED] whitelisted somewhere. That's
probably a bad idea. Spam usually uses a spoofed address.
NW7US, Tomas wrote:
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY
as NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS one, is th
weeks.)
{^_^} Joanne
- Original Message -
From: "NW7US, Tomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2006 23:42
Subject: Another example...
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY as
NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY as
NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS one, is that it seems
to actually be FROM me!!! However, it made its rounds on other servers,
first. Is it possible someone is spoofing my email address?? Or, is