On 2004-07-13, Paul Johnson penned: > > So, in essence, TMDA's unfortunate creep in popularity is extremely > harmful because it threatens to very quickly double or triple the > damage spam causes.
Too bad I haven't found a filter program that comes anywhere close to approaching the simplicity of tmda. The rules are *so freaking easy* to implement. This is a good thing. I don't use c/r, but I do use tmda's pending-message mechanism. Instead of challenging questionable messages, I "hold" them, which is an option allowing me to leave them in the queue till I feel like dealing with them. I then have a cron job to periodically tell me if there's anything new in it. I like this setup and the fact that I can whitelist an address straight from the queue interface. Out of all the messages I receive, only a handful get stuck in my pending queue, anyway -- I have my filters and whitelists set well enough that the amount of questionable messages is tiny. -- monique -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]