On Tue, 2012-09-18 at 10:38 -0400, Kris Deugau wrote:

> Noel Butler wrote:
> > On Mon, 2012-09-17 at 10:52 -0400, Kris Deugau wrote:
> > 
> >> I see more spam[1] from any one of Hotmail, Yahoo, or GMail than
> >> I do coming through the whole set of email service providers I've
> >> IDed (both email-hosting and bulkmailers) of all stripes.
> >> 
> >> As an ISP mail admin, I **CANNOT** afford to block legitimate
> >> mail from any source, and if I see a report that a legitimate
> >> mail was blocked by any local rules or DNSBL data, I change the
> >> local rule or delete the offending local DNSBL entry ASAP.
> >> 
> > 
> > As an ISP Email admin I applied the same rules evenly, to end users
> > and hosting. in early 2000's, hrmm, or was it late 90's, we
> > outright blocked AOL for some 4 months at one point, but, not being
> > in the U.S. that was an easy ride, even though AOL did have a lot
> > of dialups out here then.
> 
> After a look around http://www.ausics.net, it looks more like a
> community service project similar to Ottawa's "National Capital
> Freenet" (http://www.ncf.ca) rather than a full-on commercial ISP;
> that *does* give you more freedom to impose more aggressive rules.
> 


errrrr you do know that's one of my personal domains (and yes a
community service one) don't you? sure as heck is not a commercial one,
no money making on ausics :) 

I do use the same approach on the commercial side though, and always
have done, you;ll find more people appreciative than those who bitch
about it.

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