-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Joe Maimon wrote: | I believe one has an extra duty to be as strict as possible about | accepting email to be forwarded to external parties: | | Read: Setup for every usuable blocklist, including you own, which | rejects email outright. And spamassassin setup to reject any | reasonable low FP score threshold. And none of that "tag em all | and let the user sort it out" business. | | Its not legitimate to cover your eyes and forward probable garbage | to someone else. You want it on your system, thats your decision. | AOL blocklisting high percentage garbage senders, including those | merely forwarding, is perfectly valid in my book. | | To blocklist all servers in the path or just the most recent one is | a local decision Now here I would disagree. These are specific requests by individuals to forward mail to from one of their own accounts to another one of their own accounts. I do not think AOL (or anyone) should consider mail forwarded at the customers request as indicating that our mail servers are sending spam. As that is apparently not the case I have seriously considered as a matter of policy refusing to install mail forwards to AOL customers. Mark Radabaugh Amplex -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (MingW32) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFCHjCqg0PQSWMG2wsRAnnfAJ9IE+GIuYnBrDKrE3OlpAvZIuuXbQCfSEAS GSSlg8c0AHPh044rMDauHyI= =OjDT -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----