* Adam Stephens wrote (01/12/06 16:10):
> Chris Lear wrote:
>> * Loren Wilton wrote (01/12/06 14:54):
>>   
>>>> The html contains this sort of thing:
>>>> http://www.easyjet.com/EN/Members/
>>>>
>>>> Which looks like the culprit. In fact, every full stop in the html is
>>>> represented as . for some reason.
>>>>
>>>> Still wondering though... how do you solve a problem like EasyJet?
>>>>       
>>> Sure looks like spam to me.  ;-)
>>>
>>> Which also looks like just about every airline message I've seen from any 
>>> airline.  :-(  Apparently they hired spammers to design their marketing 
>>> campain mail.
>>>
>>> You could try sending to mostmaster or whatever at whichever marketing 
>>> company is really sending that mail and see if you can get any attention 
>>> from them.  Probably not, but it might be worth trying.
>>>     
>>
>> The trouble is, it's not marketing. It's a confirmation of a flight
>> booking, which I paid for. The airline doesn't issue tickets. So it's
>> something I genuinely want in my inbox. It looks like it's generated
>> directly by the easyjet.com web server.
>>   
> 
> I had some complaints about that this week; it's obviously a new issue, 
> and it looks like it only applies to the ticket confirmations. Since 
> people really need these booking confirmations I've whitelisted it - 
> using a whitelist_from_rcvd rule seems to catch the booking 
> confirmations only as the marketing material is sent from a different 
> machine.

Thanks for all the advice. I've reluctantly whitelisted them and written
a polite message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] It doesn't seem to have
bounced, so maybe someone will read it. I'll let you know if I get a
response.
Meanwhile, I suppose this is something for others to be aware of if you
run an mta that rejects on high SA scores (and have users that might
want to fly EasyJet).

Chris

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