I've been testing some sample mailing lists and trying to "break the rules" for my environment.
For example, I created a list and configured it to be moderated. Then, I posted a message to the list from a non-member account. One would expect (or atleast I would) that the administration interface would say something along the lines of "Post from non-member", but the fact is that doesn't occur. Instead, the fact that the list is moderated takes precedent and you get a message along these lines: "Post to moderated list" While this is technically correct, a moderated list may wish to bounce non-member submissions. Otherwise, an unsuspecting individual may simply approve a post because it appears to be "on topic", and not have a clue that the individual is not a member of the list. If this a flaw? A bug? Obviously there has to be a way to make the list say "Post from non-member" even if the list is in moderated mode. The question is, if you approve a non-member post at that point, does it get re-injected and come up as a post submitted to a moderated list, or does it just go through? (I prefer the latter) Am I barking up the wrong tree? Is this not an order of precedence issue? I'm sort of stumped on it. I have a specific list I'd like to run that is strictly limited to members only. Due to the volume of subscribers, it is clearly possible that someone wouldn't realize a post came from a non-subscriber in this scenario. -Jeff ------------------------------------------------------ Mailman-Users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users Mailman FAQ: http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/faqw-mm.py