Spam Blackhole Lists Redux
tsu doh nimh writes "Are spam blackhole lists good, bad or indifferent? That appears to be the question they're tackling in this Washington Post story. It has some interesting back and forth between supporters of the lists and those who claim they condone censorship."
J adds: Brad Templeton recently
offered some comments
on the most extreme pro-blacklist position.
By tossing spammers into blackholes...just a thought.
What do you call 100 spammers, chained together, and tossed into the ocean to drown?
A start...
Same thing should be with email. No need to blacklist bad IPs (which might not belong permanently to a spammer) or email addresses (also very temporal). Instead, list all people you trust or all their features that make the being trusted by you. You can guess that I mean e-signatures, public keys and cross-trusted CA network.
P.S. if it's more appropriate, please use for the text above:
Less is more !