This week I saw some advertisements from sendx.io on...
YouTube promoting mailing list services
I'm curious, what are your points of view on companies
that promote such concepts in their advertising?
This week I saw some advertisements from sendx.io on
YouTube promoting mailing list services, some of which
emphasized that they perform "spamtrap detection" (other
ads from the same company also emphasized "Built-in
Email list Cleaning" which is just a fancy way of
writing "list washing").
I'm curious, what are your points of view on companies
that promote such concepts in their advertising? What
concerns do you have about them and their apparent (as
advertized) practises?
On 28.11.2024 08:57 Uhr Randolf Richardson 張文道 wrote:
This week I saw some advertisements from sendx.io on
YouTube promoting mailing list services, some of which
emphasized that they perform "spamtrap detection" (other
ads from the same company also emphasized "Built-in
Email list Cleaning" which is just a fancy way of
writing "list washing").
True, but there is also the situation where people intentionally put
spamtrap addresses on mailing lists to let the company list itself to
annoy them.
I would suggest to monitor that first and if they behave
spammer-friendly, reject their junk by default.
Confirmed opt-in protects against that, unless the
spamtrap address is controlled by the saboteur who
follows the opt-in confirmation steps.
The opt-out auto-subscribed eMail lists are unreasonable,
and I regard those as spam, and are therefore worthy of
inclusion in blacklists.
On 11/29/24 5:13 PM, Randolf Richardson 張文道 wrote:
...
The opt-out auto-subscribed eMail lists are unreasonable,
and I regard those as spam, and are therefore worthy of
inclusion in blacklists.
I have put their domain name on my index.html
Somehow the spams stopped that way
On Fri, 29 Nov 2024 17:51:11 +0100
tjoen <tjoen@dds.invalid> wrote:
On 11/29/24 5:13 PM, Randolf Richardson 張文道 wrote:
...
The opt-out auto-subscribed eMail lists are unreasonable,
and I regard those as spam, and are therefore worthy of
inclusion in blacklists.
I have put their domain name on my index.html
Somehow the spams stopped that way
Oh, now that's interesting. I wonder if they consider you an ally
after their spiders re-visited the web site, or if it's just a
coincidence.
On 29.11.2024 08:13 Uhr Randolf Richardson 張文道 wrote:
Confirmed opt-in protects against that, unless the
spamtrap address is controlled by the saboteur who
follows the opt-in confirmation steps.
When I worked at the university, someone used the opt-in mails to flood
other machines with those mails. This can also be used to hit spamtraps.
Register 50 domains and point their MX to the trap, then enter those addresses.
High probability that you will be listed.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 463 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 142:00:51 |
Calls: | 9,381 |
Calls today: | 1 |
Files: | 13,558 |
Messages: | 6,094,751 |