on Mon, Oct 02, 2006 at 06:45:46PM -0400, up@3.am wrote:
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006, Rick Kunkel wrote:
I had users that appeared to be getting their email blocked seemingly because in their sigs, they write their phone number that stupid IP-Address-Wannabe method, like:
206.555.1212
As an aside, is this something that's the norm in other places, like commas instead of periods for decimals in other countries? I'd hate to sound critical if it was. It just seems that I know a large amount of very American people who have decided that phone numbers with periods in them somehow look more "hip" than dashes. I despise that. Can you tell? ;)
Do those people also put "http://" in front of their phone numbers? If not, then AOL would reject any email containing an IP address in the message body for any reason.
You've never seen anything like http://foo.example.com * 978-555-1212 * 978-555-2424 (fax) * FooBar Ltd. in a sig? Now how about in spam? URLs in spam are often so broken they're unusable in anything but the most forgiving mail clients, but that doesn't stop them from being spam, and it doesn't stop others from trying to detect them despite all their brokenness. Cut AOL some slack - they've been very responsive whenever I have had trouble with them, and they've been very responsive this time. -- hesketh.com/inc. v: +1(919)834-2552 f: +1(919)834-2553 w: http://hesketh.com/ antispam news, solutions for sendmail, exim, postfix: http://enemieslist.com/ rambling, amusements, edifications and suchlike: http://interrupt-driven.com/