I generally hate emails that just say "I agree." But this one is worth underscoring, imho. I think turning on whatever one needs to turn on to verify senders is one of the most powerful spam blocking approaches around. Spamers love to hide. Verification seeks to ascertain that there's a real there there before accepting mail. Steve Holmes writes: > From: Steve Holmes <steve at holmesgrown.com> > > On Sun, Jan 18, 2004 at 09:29:11AM -0600, Kenny Hitt wrote: > > I'm not sure how you handle mail, but making your MTA really picky helps > > keep some of them out as well. In exim, options like sender_try_verify > > and receiver_verify stop some of them from beeing delivered. > > In addition, exim has a filtering language which can be inserted into > your .forward file too. This could take the place of procmail or at > least gives another option. I use that to catch the Spam=yes string > and throw them away. > > -- > HolmesGrown Solutions > The best solutions for the best price! > http://ld.net/?holmesgrown > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup -- Janina Sajka Email: janina at rednote.net Phone: +1 (202) 408-8175 Director, Technology Research and Development American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) http://www.afb.org Chair, Accessibility Work Group Free Standards Group http://a11y.org