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Re: Healey Email question

To: mgtrcars@galaxyinternet.net, healeys@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: Re: Healey Email question
From: Bob Spidell <bspidell@comcast.net>
Date: Sun, 07 Jan 2007 07:29:21 -0800
Mark,

I'm not an expert on email server applications, but I'm in tech and have 
been following this
issue some.

Short answer: the spam is not coming from the Healey List.  The List is 
a "closed" system; you
have to be subscribed in order to send and receive messages to/from the 
List server.  The
spammers either haven't figured out how to automate subscribing, or 
haven't bothered (yet).

The spam is almost certainly coming through your ISP via various lists 
that are acquired,
bought and sold, or otherwise promulgated throughout the spammers' 
community.  There
has been a significant uptick in spam in the last few months, as the 
spammers are using more
sophisticated "bots" to surf through email servers and acquire valid 
email addresses, and
"zombie" computers to proliferate the messages.  Unfortunately, you're 
on a few lists. 
The following article is pretty informative (I think you have to be a 
subscriber to NY Times
online, but registration is free and they've never spammed me):

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/technology/07net.html?hp&ex=1168232400&en=60c6afb90ec2af68&ei=5094&partner=homepage

If the link doesn't work, the article was still on the home page this 
morning.

Unfortunately, this problem is going to get worse before it gets better 
(if it DOES get better :( )
Your ISP should have spam/malware filtering software and/or some 
hardware to detect and
eliminate this crap (companies like Fortinet, Barracuda and others make 
dedicated hardware
to trap spam).  My ISP, Comcast, is doing a pretty good job filtering 
spam.  Some of what gets
through gets zapped by my Thunderbird email client, but I still have to 
delete an occasional spam
message.  My work email server is not protected and I probably get 
50-100 spam messages a
day from it.  Sounds like your ISP needs to get hardware and software to 
help eliminate spam. 

BTW,  most of the medications advertised by spammers is fake (so I'm 
told ;).  But, occasionally
the spammers are able to pump-and-dump penny stocks at a profit by 
bombing the Internet
with "hot stock tips."  Me, I made my fortune from a nice guy in Nigeria 
that needed some help ...


bs



mgtrcars@galaxyinternet.net wrote:
> Just in the last couple of months the elicit emails that I have been getting
> has tripled.  I spend much of my time "Block Sendering" these emails and have
> little time left to actually read the real Healey oriented mail.   The Healey
> list is really my only outside source for emails that I have , next to a few
> personal acquaintances.  (such a dull life I know).
>
> My questions to the savvy computer types on the list are,
>
> -  Are these miscellaneous emails coming through the Healey list, or through
> my internet provider?   Is their anything else I can do next to setting up
> Email Rules and having them deleted before they come through?   That is a bit
> hit and miss cause the subject matter varies so much.  Mostly weight loss and
> Viagra related,  of which I have no problem either way, thank you very much.
> And some even come across in foreign languages that I can't even read.
>
> Thanks in advance,   Mark
>
>
>   

***************************************************************
Bob Spidell         San Jose, CA        bspidell@comcast.net
'67 Austin-Healey 3000             '56 Austin-Healey 100M
***************************************************************




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