by chris » Tue Mar 29, 2005 7:55 pm
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:And yes... you would think that it would be nice if people could be adults and maybe we wouldn't have to have EVERY FRIGGING THING infected with these spam managers... but there won't be penalties for it! Backup your copy of 'Hatecreed and the Keening Weenies' in MP3 form and you're a criminal, but spam thousands of bulletin boards? Why should the government step in there? Huh!!?!?!?!
I'm so sick and tired of dealing with spam and hack attempts and all that crap. I spend all friggin' day at work tweaking spam filters on our mail server, or dealing with infected Windows machines, or hacked Unix machines, or whatnot. When the amount of time you spend trying to keep systems secure is greater than the time you spend actually using them, the law of diminishing returns kicks in. If it weren't for the fact that the majority of the people I administer are Mac users, and Macs are (so far) pretty immune to this crap, I'd probably go insane, quit my job, and spend the rest of my life huddled over an Atari 800.
But back to the board. Do you have the option of blocking IP addresses? If you can, I'd be happy to compile a list of every IP address range in China, Korea, and Russia. That would be a good starting point.
[quote="Ice Cream Jonsey"]And yes... you would think that it would be nice if people could be adults and maybe we wouldn't have to have EVERY FRIGGING THING infected with these spam managers... but there won't be penalties for it! Backup your copy of 'Hatecreed and the Keening Weenies' in MP3 form and you're a criminal, but spam thousands of bulletin boards? Why should the government step in there? Huh!!?!?!?![/quote]
I'm so sick and tired of dealing with spam and hack attempts and all that crap. I spend all friggin' day at work tweaking spam filters on our mail server, or dealing with infected Windows machines, or hacked Unix machines, or whatnot. When the amount of time you spend trying to keep systems secure is greater than the time you spend actually using them, the law of diminishing returns kicks in. If it weren't for the fact that the majority of the people I administer are Mac users, and Macs are (so far) pretty immune to this crap, I'd probably go insane, quit my job, and spend the rest of my life huddled over an Atari 800.
But back to the board. Do you have the option of blocking IP addresses? If you can, I'd be happy to compile a list of every IP address range in China, Korea, and Russia. That would be a good starting point.