On Mon, 2006-12-11 at 19:51 -0600, René Berber wrote: > Mark Nienberg wrote: > > > In the welcome message that I received when I subscribed to this list it > > says: > > > > Send mail to the following for info and FAQ for this list: > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Useless addresses, I also tried. > > [snip] > > But a message I sent to that address bounced with this error: > > That, I didn't try... > > [snip] > > At any rate, could someone please answer this question: > > > > How can I stop mail delivery from the list and still stay subscribed? > > No dice ;-) I tried the same you are doing, since I read the newsgroup using > Gmane, and what I found out (very easily) is that this list uses ezmlm, and > that > piece of ... doesn't have that functionality, in fact has very little > functionality (compared to Mailman).
A late reply to this thread and I don't know if this works for this list but have it a try. http://www.ezmlm.org/ezman/ezman2.html 2.4 Adding subscriber aliases(*). ezmlm lists may be set up to only allow subscribers to send messages to the list. This is less secure than moderation, but still keeps most ``garbage'' off the list. Occasionally, a user may wish to send messages from an address other than the subscription address. As a remote administrator, you can add the user's alias to a special ``allow'' database. To add [EMAIL PROTECTED] as an alias to the [EMAIL PROTECTED], send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] -unsubscribe and other commands work the same way. The messages ezmlm sends talk about the [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list, but of course you know that this is just a figure of speech. On lists that do not have subscription moderation, users can add themselves to the ``allow'' database in the same way. This is documented only briefly in the USER'S manual. Archive access may also be restricted to subscribers. Like subscribers of the list or the digest list, addresses in the ``allow'' database are allowed to access the archive. -- With kind regards, Maurice Lucas TAOS-IT