AOL users:
If you continue to mark this list as "spam", you risk having this list blocked for *all* AOL users. Additionally, you'll risk having all other lists I host, blocked, towards all AOL users. Your marking the mail as spam causes damage to others.
As such, this is your warning: As I detect you marking the mail as spam, you will be unsubscribed from the list, without notice.
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
I suspect most AOL'ers who are marking the list as spam would be only
too happy to unsubscribe themselves, if only they could figure out
how. ;)
--
Josh Whitver
josh@whitver.net / whitverj@urbandale.k12.ia.us
A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at
kickboxing.
On Aug 10, 2010, at 8:13 PM, Jason Fesler jfesler@gigo.com wrote:
AOL users:
If you continue to mark this list as "spam", you risk having this
list blocked for *all* AOL users. Additionally, you'll risk having all
other lists I host, blocked, towards all AOL users. Your marking the mail
as spam causes damage to others.As such, this is your warning: As I detect you marking the mail as
spam, you will be unsubscribed from the list, without notice.
- jason, wearing the hat of postmaster@lists.roundcube.net
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/ef0bace8
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
There is a footer at the bottom of every email from the list for exactly this purpose.
On 11/08/2010 9:20 AM, Josh Whitver wrote:
I suspect most AOL'ers who are marking the list as spam would be only too happy to unsubscribe themselves, if only they could figure out how. ;)
-- Josh Whitver josh@whitver.net / whitverj@urbandale.k12.ia.us A computer once beat me at chess, but it was no match for me at kickboxing.
On Aug 10, 2010, at 8:13 PM, Jason Feslerjfesler@gigo.com wrote:
AOL users:
If you continue to mark this list as "spam", you risk having this list blocked for *all* AOL users. Additionally, you'll risk having all other lists I host, blocked, towards all AOL users. Your marking the mail as spam causes damage to others.
As such, this is your warning: As I detect you marking the mail as spam, you will be unsubscribed from the list, without notice.
- jason, wearing the hat of postmaster@lists.roundcube.net
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/ef0bace8
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/3ae57cde
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
On Tue, 10 Aug 2010 20:20:37 -0500, Josh Whitver whitverj@urbandale.k12.ia.us wrote:
I suspect most AOL'ers who are marking the list as spam would be only
too happy to unsubscribe themselves, if only they could figure out
how. ;)
I can't imagine why someone who uses AOL for e-mail would have any interest in Roundcube.
Would anyone install Roundcube just to connect it to an IMAP4/SMTP run by AOL? [ed note: LOL!]
There may be a sinister reason. Having superficially Googled this just now, I found this:
http://www.webmasterworld.com/webmaster/3515610.htm
If you a read the first reply to the article immediately below it, you find this claim:
[AOL], at least from time to time, has "report spam and get a prize!" campaigns, which, to my understanding, actually encourage their users to click the "report" button as frequently as possible in hopes of winning cars, etc.''
Aha! What may be going on is that AOL users are massively subscribing to mailing lists in which they have no interest, only to generate some traffic and report it as spam, in hopes of winning a spam reporting prize.
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e
FYI, said user marked another several messages as spam, but this time with the updated "BT/xxxxxx" at the bottom of the messages. They have been unsubscribed.
List info: http://lists.roundcube.net/users/ BT/9b404e9e