Verizon pro-rates their termination fees. You could also try to find someone that will buy your phone and inherit the rest of your contract for you. I know that there is at least one website that lets you post/search for contracts to trade.
The smart ones are also likely not to fall victim to running a vbs script in their webmail. It's a pity that they either can't follow company policy or can't find a job that lets them do a personal task here or there.
I am having this same issue. I have SPF set up with '-all' on the end of it. This still lands me with a lot of bounces every day. I am using Gmail for my mail and I have about 10 to 20 bounces that didn't get caught by their spam filter sitting in my inbox every morning.
Here is the SPF line I am using with Gmail (with an irrelevant ip4 entry omitted):
@ IN TXT "v=spf1 mx include:aspmx.googlemail.com -all"
I figure that at worst, I am keeping myself off blacklists because the ones likely to blacklist my domain have at least implemented SPF. It is still a fairly annoying situation. It is probably worth noting that I have a catch-all alias for inbound emails. I like to give a different email address for each site I go to so that I can track who is sending me spam. The downside to this apparently being that it potentially opens your domain up to being used TO spam.
This is a neat idea, but as pointed out in other posts, there are some serious drawbacks as far as corrosion and other contaminants in the water. Have you considered using a heat exchanger? This would isolate you from pool water and you could fill the lines with clean water to avoid all of these issues.
People that want these domains run click farms. They make their money by showing ads based on the site the person meant to visit, from Google or whomever. It doesn't make sense for a phisher to pay big money for these domains when they can phish just as well with ksajdfxdvos.com.
This guy that submitted this appears to be a tad biased, even a Yahoo fanboy. There is a Yahoo category on his blog with over 40 entries, and no Google category. So, there's not a wonderfully balanced point of view here. I'd take his "verdict" with a grain of salt, flamebait at best.
There is a nifty app for the Treo that will let you create rulesets for calls and how to respond to them. You can have it immediately drop the call to voicemail, hang up on them, ignore, etc. It will do the same for SMS messages too. It's pretty neat if you have the time to set up.
It's the complete opposite. They are the ones being the asshole and ruining someone's flight by reclining their seat violently without looking back to see if it's ok. I don't own a set of these, but I've had someone recline their seat on my knees before. It wasn't enough that they hit my knees the first time, they then kept jamming their seat back on them until it fully reclined. What about my flight being ruined? No you're right, I'm the asshole for not wanting to announce to the person that I'm 6'5" and can barely fit my knees behind their seat to begin with when they can plainly see that themselves. No thanks; I'll be the guy who had to pay twice as much to sit in business class just for the leg room to avoid people like you thinking I'm the asshole. Kudos.
I'm 6'5" and I HATE how inconsiderate most people can be. This world is too small for tall people. I have qualms with cars too, but I digress. Unless I'm flying Airtran business class (most affordable larger seating available), then it's a miserable time all around. I recently booked a business class trip on US Airways and the flight was cancelled so they shoved me in coach calling my purchase a promotional fare -- I was pissed! Anyway, check out the knee defender.
I don't see how these laws will do much. They're not aimed at the bulk of the spam coming from inside the US afaik. Both of them have sections in them like this:
Sec. 5. (1) A person shall not send, cause to be sent, or conspire with a third party to send a message to a contact point that has been registered for more than 30 calendar days with the department if the primary purpose of the message is to, directly or indirectly, advertise or otherwise link to a message that advertises a product or service that a minor is prohibited by law from purchasing, viewing, possessing, participating in, or otherwise receiving.
They seem aimed at curbing porn and prescription drug spam to minors. Though, anyone who sends that stuff recklessly is already violating the can-spam act and probably overseas anyway.
Are these kids are signing up at porn sites or something and getting spammed? It would seem that a better use of time would be managing a whitelist for their kids' inboxes instead of making up new laws.
I have a Dell 2001FP and I have not had any such problems with it at all. In fact, I was given the title Jäger Captain Red at a recent lan party while using it to lead my team to victory in Unreal Tournament.
The bill would not affect people who are trying to safeguard their privacy because it only makes it a crime to submit false registration data when it is done to help commit a crime, said Mark Bohannon, senior vice president for public policy at the Software & Information Industry Association, which supports the bill.
I was pretty furious when I read the headline, but the actual article calmed me a bit. Then again, it's all just a conspiracy to eventually become a police state where we have no rights, right?
Ok, so every post that I've read so far seems to state that this quark would just pass right through you without causing a great amount of damage. I'm having a hard time believing this when seismographs on the other side of the globe could detect this particle moving through the earth thousands of miles away. I think you'd definately have some issues if such a particle went through you. I think it would knock you off your feet and leave you without a head no matter how small it is. A mass travelling at that velocity is certain to cause some turbulence, and I think there's already physical proof of that... they recorded it with their seismographs.
Verizon pro-rates their termination fees. You could also try to find someone that will buy your phone and inherit the rest of your contract for you. I know that there is at least one website that lets you post/search for contracts to trade.
This has to be a bad Polack joke. I bet they arrest signers for the deaf at concerts, too.
Does anyone else suddenly have an urge to play some Gran Turismo 3?
The smart ones are also likely not to fall victim to running a vbs script in their webmail. It's a pity that they either can't follow company policy or can't find a job that lets them do a personal task here or there.
I am hosting other domains at Gmail, but not this one. I use postfix to forward email address to myself and others, along with a catch-all.
DST = Daylight savings time
SLA = Service level agreement
Right now I just use the domain name without the tld. I like your idea though, I will have to start doing that. Thanks!
Yeah, I may end up having to do this. It was nice while it lasted! I could probably get away with doing a catch-all on a subdomain.. hmm...
I am having this same issue. I have SPF set up with '-all' on the end of it. This still lands me with a lot of bounces every day. I am using Gmail for my mail and I have about 10 to 20 bounces that didn't get caught by their spam filter sitting in my inbox every morning.
Here is the SPF line I am using with Gmail (with an irrelevant ip4 entry omitted):
@ IN TXT "v=spf1 mx include:aspmx.googlemail.com -all"
I figure that at worst, I am keeping myself off blacklists because the ones likely to blacklist my domain have at least implemented SPF. It is still a fairly annoying situation. It is probably worth noting that I have a catch-all alias for inbound emails. I like to give a different email address for each site I go to so that I can track who is sending me spam. The downside to this apparently being that it potentially opens your domain up to being used TO spam.
This is a neat idea, but as pointed out in other posts, there are some serious drawbacks as far as corrosion and other contaminants in the water. Have you considered using a heat exchanger? This would isolate you from pool water and you could fill the lines with clean water to avoid all of these issues.
People that want these domains run click farms. They make their money by showing ads based on the site the person meant to visit, from Google or whomever. It doesn't make sense for a phisher to pay big money for these domains when they can phish just as well with ksajdfxdvos.com.
This guy that submitted this appears to be a tad biased, even a Yahoo fanboy. There is a Yahoo category on his blog with over 40 entries, and no Google category. So, there's not a wonderfully balanced point of view here. I'd take his "verdict" with a grain of salt, flamebait at best.
http://www.moskalyuk.com/blog/category/yahoo/
... so that's what FUD stands for! ;)
There is a nifty app for the Treo that will let you create rulesets for calls and how to respond to them. You can have it immediately drop the call to voicemail, hang up on them, ignore, etc. It will do the same for SMS messages too. It's pretty neat if you have the time to set up.
http://www.velocityware.com/callfilter/cfinfo.htm
It's the complete opposite. They are the ones being the asshole and ruining someone's flight by reclining their seat violently without looking back to see if it's ok. I don't own a set of these, but I've had someone recline their seat on my knees before. It wasn't enough that they hit my knees the first time, they then kept jamming their seat back on them until it fully reclined. What about my flight being ruined? No you're right, I'm the asshole for not wanting to announce to the person that I'm 6'5" and can barely fit my knees behind their seat to begin with when they can plainly see that themselves. No thanks; I'll be the guy who had to pay twice as much to sit in business class just for the leg room to avoid people like you thinking I'm the asshole. Kudos.
I'm 6'5" and I HATE how inconsiderate most people can be. This world is too small for tall people. I have qualms with cars too, but I digress. Unless I'm flying Airtran business class (most affordable larger seating available), then it's a miserable time all around. I recently booked a business class trip on US Airways and the flight was cancelled so they shoved me in coach calling my purchase a promotional fare -- I was pissed! Anyway, check out the knee defender.
It looks like it may vary per network and not per show?
http://alvyray.com/DigitalTV/Naming_Proposal.htm
They seem aimed at curbing porn and prescription drug spam to minors. Though, anyone who sends that stuff recklessly is already violating the can-spam act and probably overseas anyway.
Are these kids are signing up at porn sites or something and getting spammed? It would seem that a better use of time would be managing a whitelist for their kids' inboxes instead of making up new laws.
I have a Dell 2001FP and I have not had any such problems with it at all. In fact, I was given the title Jäger Captain Red at a recent lan party while using it to lead my team to victory in Unreal Tournament.
Did anyone else notice "US Air Force" in the background of this one???
k hd02.jpg
http://www.ninfinger.org/~sven/models/sovietsp/ln
If you read the first sentence of the news post you would have found this link.
Here too.
More at bluesnews.
Ok, so every post that I've read so far seems to state that this quark would just pass right through you without causing a great amount of damage. I'm having a hard time believing this when seismographs on the other side of the globe could detect this particle moving through the earth thousands of miles away. I think you'd definately have some issues if such a particle went through you. I think it would knock you off your feet and leave you without a head no matter how small it is. A mass travelling at that velocity is certain to cause some turbulence, and I think there's already physical proof of that... they recorded it with their seismographs.