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From: "Gordon Mohr" <gojomo@usa.net>
To: <fork@spamassassin.taint.org>
References: <F568C0CD-9E71-11D6-B583-000393A46DEA@alumni.caltech.edu>
Subject: Re: HD/ID: High-Def Independence Day
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Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2002 17:57:29 -0700

"SpamAssassin Killed My Independence Day Party"

With all the spam that gets through, I had no idea
a filter was in effect at the FoRK listserv. 

Turn it off! It not only risks silent false 
positives, but suffers them in such a way that 
individuals cannot adjust/detect/remedy them. 

Also, anti-spam startups need end-users. 
Centralized spam fighting takes food out
of those coders' mouths!

I still think self-add whitelists are underrated. 
A FoRK whitelist would presumably start with
all subscribers, and grow from there. Bouncing
problem mail, in a way that humans can understand
how to whitelist themselves for a resend, avoids 
the problem of silent failures without opening the 
door to lazy, forged-"from" spammers. 

- Gordon

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Rohit Khare" <khare@alumni.caltech.edu>
To: <fork@spamassassin.taint.org>
Sent: Tuesday, July 23, 2002 12:25 PM
Subject: Re: HD/ID: High-Def Independence Day


> On Sunday, June 30, 2002, at 12:18 AM, Rohit Khare wrote:
> > You're all invited to join me for a South Bay Hi-Def spectacle at my 
> > apartment in Sunnyvale on the Fourth!
> 
> So here's the final report on the HD/ID party. As no less than TEN 
> forkers pointed out, the invitation, while sent on Sunday 6/30, was only 
> delivered ten days later on 7/9.
> 
> It got flagged as spam.
> 
> Yes, on a mailing list awash in crap -- and some it is even unsolicited 
> commercial email, heavens! -- our trusty mailman filters captured and 
> quarantined just two posts that week, one from me that was > 100K (the 
> fat articles) and one that was bcc:d (the invite).
> 
> Now, it was a little difficult to recalibrate self-esteem, which as you 
> can imagine was proportional to the two-digit attendance  -- in binary!
> 
> According to the George Washington documentary, I almost had as much 
> alcohol on hand than he did -- Virginia tradition being to copiously 
> lubricate each voter. Election day was a public festival day, and it 
> cost poor George an average of SIXTY-FOUR shots of hard liquor PER VOTER 
> that day...
> 
> So, herewith is the prize for most appropriate flame my delayed invite 
> got:
> 
> > I unfortunately will have had other plans and thus will
> > not be able to have made it.  Yes.
> >
> > -faisal
> 
> One of our competitors added:
> > Wow - I just got this now - I guess that was KnowLate!
> 
> And there is no prize for guessing which cold, dark forks emitted these 
> two plaints:
> 
>  From Whiny Dwarf:
> > Fix your mail server! just a bit late!
> 
> And Angry Dwarf:
> > God DAAAAAMMMMMNNNNN IIIIITTT! I didn't see your message until now! 
> > Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!
> >
> > We would have been there if I had seen the message before. Kuso! (as 
> > the Japanese would say).
> >
> > Fuck.
> > Fuck.
> > Fuck.
> > Fuck.
> > Fuck.
> > Fuck.
> 
> Perhaps I should remind the latter gently that it was not in any way his 
> fault. The universe *was* out to get him!
> 
> And finally, here's an object lesson for all ye of little faith to learn 
> from my sins:
> 
> > SpamAssassin rated it spam (barely). Gotta stop
> > using those "words and phrases which indicate porn" :-)
> 
> Yes, boys and girls, Mr. Assassin, like Mr. Lott, gets very annoyed if 
> you call the Great American Shrine a... "boob tube"
> 
> :-)
>    Rohit
> 
> PS. This is the obscure footnote where I actually hide the bits in this 
> post. What we just encountered here is that an event-processing system 
> with a 10-day RTT cannot be used to reliably handle events more often 
> than once every 20 days. That's why I waited to reply. six bonus points 
> to anyone who can prove this hunch of mine. Hint: try analyzing the 
> problem in frequency-domain.
> 
> http://xent.com/mailman/listinfo/fork

http://xent.com/mailman/listinfo/fork