RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
- Display Name
Display name:
Geek on the Hill
I have a client who's threatening to bail because of excessive spam. He said that in the last 24 hours, it had been "unbearable."
So I ran a mail delivery report and found that out of 847 mails his users received during that period, all but 27 were from addresses to which users had sent email. This was easy to do because some of the users have BoxTrapper enabled, which whitelists every address to which the user sends mail (along with any CCs).
Even assuming that all 27 messages that made it through the multiple levels of spam filtering and weren't in the whitelists were spam, we're only talking about 3.2 percent of the total received messages. I don't think that's "unbearable," especially since the client insists on using easy-to-guess email addresses like "bob," "dan," "office," and so forth. And again, I counted any mail from non-whitelisted addresses as spam.
Also, he has 26 users, and half a dozen of them account for almost all the presumed spam that was received. They're all old accounts that probably should be changed because they've gotten on spam lists over the years, but he refuses to change them.
Frankly, I may fire this client before he gets the chance to bail because he's a pain in my ass. It's a typical father-son situation: The father was a pleasure to do business with, but the son is an obnoxious little twerp who needs to be slapped upside the head a few times. But that's neither here nor there.
So what do you think a "reasonable" amount of spam slipping past the filters would be?
Rich
So I ran a mail delivery report and found that out of 847 mails his users received during that period, all but 27 were from addresses to which users had sent email. This was easy to do because some of the users have BoxTrapper enabled, which whitelists every address to which the user sends mail (along with any CCs).
Even assuming that all 27 messages that made it through the multiple levels of spam filtering and weren't in the whitelists were spam, we're only talking about 3.2 percent of the total received messages. I don't think that's "unbearable," especially since the client insists on using easy-to-guess email addresses like "bob," "dan," "office," and so forth. And again, I counted any mail from non-whitelisted addresses as spam.
Also, he has 26 users, and half a dozen of them account for almost all the presumed spam that was received. They're all old accounts that probably should be changed because they've gotten on spam lists over the years, but he refuses to change them.
Frankly, I may fire this client before he gets the chance to bail because he's a pain in my ass. It's a typical father-son situation: The father was a pleasure to do business with, but the son is an obnoxious little twerp who needs to be slapped upside the head a few times. But that's neither here nor there.
So what do you think a "reasonable" amount of spam slipping past the filters would be?
Rich