Re: Workaround: KPDF asks for password on some PDFs

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On Friday 21 February 2025 12:15:58 J Leslie Turriff via tde-users wrote:
> On 2025-02-21 08:35:12 gene heskett via tde-users wrote:
> > On 2/21/25 05:23, J Leslie Turriff via tde-users wrote:
> > > On 2025-02-21 04:13:15 gene heskett via tde-users wrote:
> > >> On 2/21/25 00:30, J Leslie Turriff via tde-users wrote:
> > >>> On 2025-02-20 06:31:55 E. Liddell via tde-users wrote:
> > >>>> On Thu, 20 Feb 2025 01:58:05 -0500
> > >>>>
> > >>>> gene heskett via tde-users <users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > >>>>> mailing list stripped the attachment.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> Came through for me (small attach with mimetype
> > >>>> "text/x-shellscript"), so it isn't the list that's at fault, but
> > >>>> something else in your email setup.
> > >>>>
> > >>>> E. Liddell
> > >>>
> > >>> 	Probably a "Nanny" filter that disallows code attachments.
> > >>
> > >> tbird beta user here, likely suspects?
> > >
> > > 	Some mail server through which your email is routed en route to its
> > > destination.
> >
> > I haven't installed anything like that. that I know of. mail server is
> > mail2world via the local shentel cable tv company.
>
> 	No, no.  This would be something happening on an intermediate mail server
> between the one that provides your mail service and your desktop.
>
> 	Another possibility is that your email provider is gratuitously moving
> mail items that it thinks are spam into the spam folder on their server, so
> it never gets sent on to you.  I'm having trouble with missing emails
> myself at the moment, and while investigating I used the web mail interface
> (I HATE it and only use it when I MUST (maybe once or twice a year), and
> discovered 321 emails that had been held in the server's spam folder.  I
> had to call their customer support to find out how to defeat their
> "helpful" intervention. Unfortunately, after they downloaded, the emails
> I'm currently searching for were not in that batch, so the first
> possibility is likely my problem.
>
> Leslie

Yeah, I am guessing that it is Gene's ISP that filters some of the more 
obvious or egregious spam, as well as any attachments that look like they 
could be something unwanted ... such as a shell script.

Almost certainly, no actual person looks at attachments, etc., but an 
automated filter probably can detect a shell script, without knowing its 
contents or purpose, or its origin, so it just gets blocked. 

Maybe, if actual human beings knew that Gene was on a computer users mailing 
list, and that we sometimes share such tips, tricks and scripts, they would 
have recognized that it's probably okay. But automated filters aren't that 
smart. 

Bill


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