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Re: Antispam measures circumventing

Started byJugurtha Hadjar <jugurtha.hadjar@gmail.com>
First post2013-09-22 11:10 +0100
Last post2013-09-22 11:10 +0100
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  Re: Antispam measures circumventing Jugurtha Hadjar <jugurtha.hadjar@gmail.com> - 2013-09-22 11:10 +0100

#54579 — Re: Antispam measures circumventing

FromJugurtha Hadjar <jugurtha.hadjar@gmail.com>
Date2013-09-22 11:10 +0100
SubjectRe: Antispam measures circumventing
Message-ID<mailman.241.1379844622.18130.python-list@python.org>
On 09/20/2013 08:02 PM, Joel Goldstick wrote:

>
> Last year I was playing around with django forms and wrote some code
> that required the user to add some numbers before the form was
> submitted. Here is the article:
> http://www.joelgoldstick.com/blog/2012/sep/30/django-forms/
>
> This isn't exactly what you are asking, but it does give you a change to
> let someone send you mail without giving out your email address.
>

Still interesting. Anything to fight spam. I was thinking more about 
when your e-mail address is out there (in mailing lists, for example).

Some lists do the effort to at least do the (dot) and (at) kung fu to 
hide your address to a certain degree. Others just put it as a 
low-hanging fruit, in ole' plain text, ready to harvest.

I joined my e-mail address in the code comment, that's why I was 
thinking that way.


> With the onslaught of social media stuff, it feels like sites like
> linked in and anything that uses gmail want to get you to give away your
> email address, and perhaps give access to everyone in your lists. So,
> I'm suggesting its really a loosing battle.
>

You don't say! There's a Firefox add-on called "Collusion" that shows 
how websites exchange your data between them and let me tell you: It's 
not reassuring.

> --
> Joel Goldstick
> http://joelgoldstick.com


-- 
~Jugurtha Hadjar,

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