This is exactly what I do, and what I've been doing for two years now per recommendation from another friend. I can't suggest this strongly enough.
If it ever gets violated, add that address to an account with zero or small size limit and let it bounce back to them.
I get less than a half-dozen pieces of spam per month. Most are to the address I put in the whois information (whois@domain), followed closely by sales@domain, info@domain and webmaster@domain, none of which were intended to be valid addresses anyway.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I read somewhere that the foam hit the shuttle at over the speed of sound (the foam's falling speed relative to the speed of the shuttle).
I'd say anything hitting anything at over the speed of sound is going to cause damage.
They technically are. How about we just stop stealing from their budgets?
This is exactly what I do, and what I've been doing for two years now per recommendation from another friend. I can't suggest this strongly enough.
If it ever gets violated, add that address to an account with zero or small size limit and let it bounce back to them.
I get less than a half-dozen pieces of spam per month. Most are to the address I put in the whois information (whois@domain), followed closely by sales@domain, info@domain and webmaster@domain, none of which were intended to be valid addresses anyway.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I read somewhere that the foam hit the shuttle at over the speed of sound (the foam's falling speed relative to the speed of the shuttle). I'd say anything hitting anything at over the speed of sound is going to cause damage.
I think it already has...from 2-3am CDST my firewall log had 2-3 hits per minute to 1434, half of them from .edu domains (columbia.edu, lsu.edu, etc).
for what its worth, I haven't had a hit in almost an hour now.
I want to see this on WiGLE.