Lois:
: > Even if you did want to, was your minor inconvenience of needing a few
: > seconds to type out an email address more important than the fact
: > that you've just ruined a perfectly good new address?
Brucie:
: the email address is still perfectly good. the OP's inability to manage
: their email is not my problem.
Maybe the rest of us don't see it as an inability to manage email, but as a
way to manage it that's simply different from your way. C'mon now, you
wouldn't want everyone to be just like you, would you?
Aside from personal preferences about how to deal with spam, blocking it at
the mailbox level means that some legit email doesn't get through. Your way
of managing email has its merits, but so do other ways.
: > Aside from the spambot problem, some posters don't want to be emailed.
:
: then they should use an .invalid
I've never seen that anywhere in a how-to article or FAQ; it sounds like you
just decided that it should be "the" way to block spambots. And who's to say
that you wouldn't remove the "invalid" from it online? Besides, if that or
any other method becomes that common, spambots will learn to delete the
"invalid" or "removethis" or "nospam" that some people insert in their
addresses. Making one way of blocking addresses "the" way is inviting spam
IMO.
: > What's wrong with not putting real addresses online,
:
: heres one POV
http://www.interhack.net/pubs/munging-harmful/
If I weren't so tired and about to log off for the night, maybe it would
make sense, but the use of the word "terrorist" sounds far too strong to me.
The article doesn't have credibility to me when it takes a strong word like
that to talk about email. People are just trying to protect themselves from
spammers.
Lois