I don't get the anti list. I checked it and there are at least a dozen addresses on it from my domain--yet they are all bogus. So it can't be due to complaints, or people coming after her. Seemed pretty random to me.
I've been the recipient of SpamCop complaints, please don't use them. It just sends mail to every host it can find in the message--which means all the forged ones get complaints. It doesn't make any attempt to really nail the spammer. That typically requires finding the last valid ip address, finding out who owns it, and contacting them.
This is a problem not just for software, but also for books. Just as the web was making it possible to make out-of-print books available online or published on-demand, the copyright laws changed so that many of those books are no longer legally publishable--yet the copyright owners have no incentive to make them available. ---
Unfortunately spamcop has a nasty habit of sending complaints to the wrong people. I've been on the recipient end of that and I don't appreciate it.
I don't get the anti list. I checked it and there are at least a dozen addresses on it from my domain--yet they are all bogus. So it can't be due to complaints, or people coming after her. Seemed pretty random to me.
I've been the recipient of SpamCop complaints, please don't use them. It just sends mail to every host it can find in the message--which means all the forged ones get complaints. It doesn't make any attempt to really nail the spammer. That typically requires finding the last valid ip address, finding out who owns it, and contacting them.
This is a problem not just for software, but also for books. Just as the web was making it possible to make out-of-print books available online or published on-demand, the copyright laws changed so that many of those books are no longer legally publishable--yet the copyright owners have no incentive to make them available. ---