I think having an e-mail address in the title may be part of why it thinks it is spam. Also the all caps "WELCOME".
'Shindig'
Bureaucracy 1: Like Kafka, Only Funnier
A thread to discuss naming threads, board policy, new thread suggestions, and anything else that has to do with board administration and maintenance. Guaranteed to include lively debate and polls. Natter discouraged, but not deleted.
Current Stompy Feet: ita, Jon B, DXMachina, P.M. Marcontell, Liese S., amych
Actually, in poking around the junk mail filter, the list of words that it uses as indicators of spam includes the phrase "TO UNSUBSCRIBE", which appears at least a couple of times in the welcome message. That may be what put it over the top.
Kat, I'm going to wait on some answers back from tech support, and then I'll fire it off.
admins(at)buffistas.org just got its first spam.
Which pretty much has to mean the site's been harvested for e-mail addresses. Profiles are protected, but here's a warning against putting them in posts.
And while I'm here, anyone want a loan beyond your wildest imagination? I can hook you up.
Not our first. I deleted one a coupla weeks ago, but yeah, bummer.
Which pretty much has to mean the site's been harvested for e-mail addresses.
Not at all. That's the kind of email address that can easily be extracted by "Rumplestiltskin" attacks.
Not that it really matters. I just wanted to write "Rumplestiltskin".
"Rumplestiltskin" attacks
What are these?
I get tons of mail to madeupnames at my domain name but I only accept items with valid addresses. It is somewhat inconvenient for customers who misspell our names, but keeping up with dumping the stuff was burdensome after a couple years. I now only get about a dozen offers a day for larger penii and mortgages.
"Rumplestiltskin" attacks
What are these?
They are email address harvesting attacks where a spammer pretends to send email to a bunch of made-up email addresses on a mail server. The server responds differently if the email address actually exists on the server or not. The spammer keeps all the addresses that the server claims exist.
Some recent mail servers have defenses against this kind of attack, but many don't. So even if you've never posted your email address anywhere, or given it to anyone, it can still end up with the spammers.
So even if you've never posted your email address anywhere, or given it to anyone, it can still end up with the spammers.
WOW. That's really, really depressing.