On 2013-09-25 13:54, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
> And even that, I'm wondering if I'm being too cautious.
Well, if you post on mailing lists, undoubtedly your e-mail has been
posted in plaintext somewhere. I personally have my e-mail in plaintext
on chrisdown.name, and very rarely receive spam through
On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 02:00:54PM +0200, Luca Ferrari wrote:
> On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Jugurtha Hadjar
> wrote:
>
> > Supposing my name is John Doe and the e-mail is john@hotmail.com, my
> > e-mail was written like this:
> >
> > removemejohn.dospames...@removemehotmail.com'
I don't
On Fri, Sep 20, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Jugurtha Hadjar
wrote:
> Supposing my name is John Doe and the e-mail is john@hotmail.com, my
> e-mail was written like this:
>
> removemejohn.dospames...@removemehotmail.com'
This is the point: how easy you want to make the email for a human
being. I mean, y
- Original Message -
> From: Jugurtha Hadjar
> To: tutor@python.org
> Cc:
> Sent: Friday, September 20, 2013 4:50 PM
> Subject: [Tutor] AntiSpam measures circumventing
>
> Hello,
>
> I shared some assembly code (microcontrollers) and I had a comment w
On 2013-09-20 15:50, Jugurtha Hadjar wrote:
> I obviously don't like SPAM, but I just thought "If I were a
> spammer, how would I go about it".
You wouldn't, it's not effective to do this. You would just grab plain
text e-mail addresses and leave it at that, anyone who tries to
obfuscate their e-m
Hello,
I shared some assembly code (microcontrollers) and I had a comment wit
my e-mail address for contact purposes.
Supposing my name is John Doe and the e-mail is john@hotmail.com, my
e-mail was written like this:
removemejohn.dospames...@removemehotmail.com'
With a note saying to r