Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2006 17:58:01 -0700 From: "Ted Mittelstaedt" <tedm@toybox.placo.com> To: "Erik Norgaard" <norgaard@locolomo.org>, "Beech Rintoul" <freebsd@alaskaparadise.com> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Non English Spam Message-ID: <001c01c6eff4$f77cd590$3c01a8c0@coolf89ea26645> References: <200610131712.46822.freebsd@alaskaparadise.com> <4530DA30.7060004@locolomo.org>
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----- Original Message ----- From: "Erik Norgaard" <norgaard@locolomo.org> To: "Beech Rintoul" <freebsd@alaskaparadise.com> Cc: <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Sent: Saturday, October 14, 2006 5:38 AM Subject: Re: Non English Spam > > I have noted however, that some subscribers to this list write english > encoded in one of the above character sets, I don't know enough about > the character set definition, but it seems that English characters are a > subset of any character set? > > What is the recommended policy here? Should subscribers be advised to > change character set when posting to the list? > No. It's the responsibility of the person doing the filtering - in this case you - to exempt any known good e-mail sender from your filters. You know damn well that legitimate mailing list mail comes from mx2.freebsd.org (mx2.freebsd.org [216.136.204.119]) it's right in the headers of the messages on the list. You have no right to force other people to conform to what you feel is acceptable formatting of their message as long as they meet the SMTP rfc standards. That's why we have RFC's. If everyone did what your proposing then senders would have hundreds of different rules they would have to follow, over and above the normal RFCs. Ted
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