Well, Hugh, you got me thinking, and I tracked down your definition to
the American Heritage Dictionary.  So it seems I will have to withdraw
my first recommendation and use "spam" even for a single unwanted email,
and even though it's not trying to sell anything or convert anybody to
anything.  I always thought of spam as  _bulk_  mailing for the purpose
of solicitation.  But so be it.  From here on, I will always call a
spade a spade.

There is something a bit surreal about this thread being immortalized
for posterity under the heading "Who is Lisa Schnepf?"  Sounds like the
title for a psychological thriller.  I hope the real Lisa has a sense of
humor and is giggling over the whole thing.

John


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Hugh Vandervoort" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, February 22, 2007 8:22 PM
Subject: Re: PCWorks: Who is Lisa Schnepf?


> Let's call a spade a spade.
> SPAM, defined:
>    1. To send unsolicited e-mail to.
>     2. To send (a message) indiscriminately to multiple mailing lists,
> individuals, or newsgroups.
>
> Whatever the motivation of the sender, she or he is not the recipient
of
> these annoying, time consuming emails.
> This list is for the mutual education of the members, and I believe
> we've all been thoroughly educated on this topic.
> There's nothing wrong with making the kind of error Lisa made, but
> failure to fix it calls for removal, in my opinion.
> By the way, I haven't gotten any more SPAM from Lisa, so she must be
> making progress.
>
>
> John O'Flynn wrote:
> > I think it might be a good idea if we didn't use the word "spam" for
> > every kind of nuisance message that we would prefer not to receive.
It
> > can lead to misunderstandings.
> >
> > However, Lisa, the point is that the anti-spam system that you are
> > trying to use MIGHT work on an address that you want to keep special
and
> > that receives limited traffic.  However it is  _completely
incompatible_
> > with membership on mailing lists such as this one and gives
everybody a
> > pain in the neck.  We've had this problem here not once but several
> > times over the years, and of course on other lists too.
> >
> > I belong to one carefully moderated list that has a rule that people
who
> > use those "challenge systems" receive one warning, and then OUT.  No
> > "hinting" or "considering".
> >
> > John
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