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  • To: Fraser Goffin <goffinf@h...>
  • Subject: Re: Possible Problem Messages
  • From: Peter Hunsberger <peter.hunsberger@g...>
  • Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2006 08:22:12 -0600
  • Cc: xml-dev@l...
  • Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=beta; d=gmail.com; h=received:message-id:date:from:to:subject:cc:in-reply-to:mime-version:content-type:content-transfer-encoding:content-disposition:references; b=aIxVPUUD+6OTF/T2u664PFx4hTS3pI4MObU0STcO15X5r4ESx7vxArsZ4W07fy9Alzs8tb+dpAv3iVsi97E49a3L+8Txo7I8VVzqhNne3tFPETvtmd2b5pF1Wo64rl7CMX5Jp26pYr6c/B9bXVV0b8RPrGs95VmRQ1Es/OyO+dk=
  • In-reply-to: <BAY103-F1346E7FC34DFC04E82B0FEA61D0@p...>
  • References: <BAY103-F1346E7FC34DFC04E82B0FEA61D0@p...>

On 1/18/06, Fraser Goffin <goffinf@h...> wrote:
> Recently I have received a number of emails that have been sent to xml-dev
> which look dubious.

It's quite possible that they didn't come from the list but rather
that the headers where forged.  Just because an e-mail says it's form
xml-dev doesn't make it true.  If you now how, check the headers on
any suspicious e-mail before opening it.

I haven't seen any such messages, but then again I use Gmail for
mailing list stuff and it does such a great job of dumping stuff to
the Spam folder (where I just delete everything with only minimal
review) that I may not have noticed them...  Gmail (and other e-mail
programs) will alert you if the header doesn't match the reporttede
"from:" field which helps alot with such things.

--
Peter Hunsberger

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