I like how the discussion about the spam has spawned many more emails than the actual spam itself. Bask in the ultimate irony as my comment increases said spam.

I would suggest installing spamassassin (assassin is such a funny word, it has so many asses) if you have not already, and have it filtering incoming mailing list messages. I've done this before, you can set two levels, things that are very spammy just get binned, things that are maybe potentially spammy get held for moderation and a list admin can approve/reject them before they get blasted out to the list. 


On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 12:48 PM, Marc Juul <juul@labitat.dk> wrote:
On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 10:20 AM, Steve Berl <steveberl@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm not familiar with the specific list manager software being used, but seems like there should be a way that the 2 known bad From: addresses can be specifically listed.


It seems that new @yandex.com email addresses were being generated to look like existing mailing list users and subscribed to the mailing lists. That's why the complete @yandex.com ban. We'll check to see if the yandex bots have stopped in a week or two.
 
On Wednesday, October 30, 2013, Marc Juul wrote:
On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 5:10 PM, Steve Berl <steveberl@gmail.com> wrote:
You might not want to ban everyone from yandex.com. It is a huge ISP with many millions of customers from all over Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. It would be equivalent to banning everyone from yahoo.com or similar. 

I'd suggest a bit more specific filtering.

Ok. but how? Do you have a concrete suggestion?

--
Marc


--
-steve

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