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Hello,
As a senior in high school, i was able to get my private pilot's license on dec 31, 2003. i love flying(what pilot doesn't, right?) but i'm looking for a cheaper way to build hours then renting. i was just playing with an idea, and i wanted your responses. Would an airplane owner ever offer to share operating expenses for payment to share a plane? i know that i would have to be put on an insurance plan, and i of course would pay for over half of the owners insurance payement, plus whatever kind of costs for annuals and other inspections. i know this is almost like co-ownership, but i don't have the resources to be buying a plane. I'm not trying to ask for something for nothing, as i've said, i'll pay for operating and insurance costs, as agreed with an owner. Well, how would you respond to this kind of proposal? let me know! Thanks in advance, Benjamin If you want to email me.... #b#a#s#o#g#@#r#r#c#n#e#t#.#o#r#g# |
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#3
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My domain is optonline.net, which is a major cable internet ISP. If you
block optonline.net then you stop email from millions of legitimate addresses. Otherwise known as SPAM. The only people I want to hear from in my inbox are my friends, family and those I have given permission to email me. I am not trying to be arrogant, but I HATE unsolicited email with a passion. Richard "Peter Gottlieb" wrote in message et... I tried to email you but your email system rejected my address: Recipient address: Reason: Server rejected MAIL FROM address. Diagnostic code: smtp;550 5.0.0 porn spamming network Remote system: dns;mail.rrcnet.org (TCP|167.206.5.72|57474|209.105.74.131|25) (rrc2.rrcnet.org ESMTP Hello from rrcnet; Tue, 16 Mar 2004 19:51:13 -0600) Good luck. "Ben" wrote in message om... Hello, As a senior in high school, i was able to get my private pilot's license on dec 31, 2003. i love flying(what pilot doesn't, right?) but i'm looking for a cheaper way to build hours then renting. i was just playing with an idea, and i wanted your responses. Would an airplane owner ever offer to share operating expenses for payment to share a plane? i know that i would have to be put on an insurance plan, and i of course would pay for over half of the owners insurance payement, plus whatever kind of costs for annuals and other inspections. i know this is almost like co-ownership, but i don't have the resources to be buying a plane. I'm not trying to ask for something for nothing, as i've said, i'll pay for operating and insurance costs, as agreed with an owner. Well, how would you respond to this kind of proposal? let me know! Thanks in advance, Benjamin If you want to email me.... #b#a#s#o#g#@#r#r#c#n#e#t#.#o#r#g# |
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"Soon_To_Fly" wrote in message
e.rogers.com... My domain is optonline.net, which is a major cable internet ISP. If you block optonline.net then you stop email from millions of legitimate addresses. Otherwise known as SPAM. The only people I want to hear from in my inbox are my friends, family and those I have given permission to email me. I am not trying to be arrogant, but I HATE unsolicited email with a passion. I don't think he means "you stop millions of legitimate pieces of email". He just means there are millions of legitimate addresses, a handful of whom might actually send you email. For example, if one of your friends or family or those you have given permission to email you are using optonline.net, they would not be able to send you email. I hate spam as much as they next guy, but seems like you're flying off the handle a bit here... |
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On Wed, 17 Mar 2004 03:35:28 GMT, "Soon_To_Fly"
wrote: My domain is optonline.net, which is a major cable internet ISP. If you block optonline.net then you stop email from millions of legitimate addresses. Otherwise known as SPAM. The only people I want to hear from in my inbox are No, there has been great difficulty defining spam, but it is generally accepted as UBE, or commercial stuff that has not been signed up for. On thing it is not is simply unsolicited e-mail from the normal person on use net. my friends, family and those I have given permission to email me. I am not trying to be arrogant, but I HATE unsolicited email with a passion. Then don't post on newsgroups or be thoughtful enough to put a statement in your sig to reply only on usenet and the reply address is invalid. Any one using that approach and posting on use net should at least make such a statement in their sig. The original post was of such a nature than many on here would tend to give it a personal reply and it contains an address for replying. You only have to remove the characters. Hence it provides a method of replying directly and has nothing to do with your spam response. He took a very good approach. That his ISP is out in left field is not his fault. My ISP decided to start filtering. The problem was they were filtering on content and although many argue vehemently to the contrary I have found that filtering on content gives too many false positives. My wife and I both do a lot of on-line work and we depend on e-mail. It used to be something on which we could depend and where I worked was the same. (I was one of the sys admins). WE also do a lot of business via e-mail so false positives can cost money. Fortunately as a dot com I have enough authority on the web hosting I can set the filters as I wish. So I set them to only tag spam and viruses as junk mail. The mistakes that system makes is amazing, but this way I just glance through the *stuff* and delete what I don't want. I can understand dumping some ISPs into a black hole that actively host spammers, but the cable networks with millions of customers have a tremendous job of eliminating the idiots who do not use any protection on their computers and then end up and an open proxy or relay for spammers. Remember that nearly all the viruses so far have been of a nature that the user does it to them selves. It's not the OS it's the users. Some ISPs black hole any of the cable networks. I'd change ISPs in that case. One more thing. My address is "munged" but can be figured out. It is not that way because of spam. In all the years on the net I've never had a problem with spam and I've had a rather high profile. It is that way because the average user doesn't practice safe computing. I saw a figure on one of the news programs and I think one virus checker uses it in an add, that something like half the computers hooked to the internet have been infected by a virus or worm at one time or another. My address is munged because I was receiving bounce messages due to some one, or more likely several who had me in their address books had opened that worm attachment going around. They only open attachments from people they know. They never stop to think those are the people who have them in their address books and that is the most likely place for the virus to originate. They should black hole all the ISPs sending out those bounce messages and the two worst are AOL and Microsoft. (or they were) I've taught this stuff at the university level and I can say with great certainty that the average user is clueless. The people in those classes were certainly above average, had to use computers on a daily basis and over 90 % of them were clueless. Having spent my professional carer in CS I have very little tolerance for either the poorly designed spam filters, or ISPs who simply black hole the large providers to the general public. OTOH I agree whole heartedly with them for black holing the ISPs that support the spammers. Oh... The spammers have figured out that a user activated worm can be designed to harvest e-mail addresses, so many of the computers infected in the last 6 months have been doing two things. They have been providing the spamers with millions of addresses that they could not obtain otherwise AND they are installing trojans in those infected computers to send spam for them. So we are finding that some of the people who are vehemently against spam are the ones sending it and they have no idea it's coming from them. It's reaching the point where those with infected computers will have their service terminated and only be allowed back on after they prove their system is clean. That means paying the ISP to come out and check it. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Richard "Peter Gottlieb" wrote in message . net... I tried to email you but your email system rejected my address: Recipient address: Reason: Server rejected MAIL FROM address. Diagnostic code: smtp;550 5.0.0 porn spamming network Remote system: dns;mail.rrcnet.org (TCP|167.206.5.72|57474|209.105.74.131|25) (rrc2.rrcnet.org ESMTP Hello from rrcnet; Tue, 16 Mar 2004 19:51:13 -0600) Good luck. "Ben" wrote in message om... Hello, As a senior in high school, i was able to get my private pilot's license on dec 31, 2003. i love flying(what pilot doesn't, right?) but i'm looking for a cheaper way to build hours then renting. i was just playing with an idea, and i wanted your responses. Would an airplane owner ever offer to share operating expenses for payment to share a plane? i know that i would have to be put on an insurance plan, and i of course would pay for over half of the owners insurance payement, plus whatever kind of costs for annuals and other inspections. i know this is almost like co-ownership, but i don't have the resources to be buying a plane. I'm not trying to ask for something for nothing, as i've said, i'll pay for operating and insurance costs, as agreed with an owner. Well, how would you respond to this kind of proposal? let me know! Thanks in advance, Benjamin If you want to email me.... #b#a#s#o#g#@#r#r#c#n#e#t#.#o#r#g# |
#6
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![]() Roger Halstead wrote: They should black hole all the ISPs sending out those bounce messages and the two worst are AOL and Microsoft. (or they were) Well, *now* the bounce messages carry the virus themselves and the senders are forged. I must've gotten at least 30 "bounces" from various addresses purporting to be the filter at "america. net" before I finally just added the entire domain to my block list. George Patterson Battle, n; A method of untying with the teeth a political knot that would not yield to the tongue. |
#7
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![]() "Soon_To_Fly" wrote in message e.rogers.com... My domain is optonline.net, which is a major cable internet ISP. If you block optonline.net then you stop email from millions of legitimate addresses. Otherwise known as SPAM. The only people I want to hear from in my inbox are my friends, family and those I have given permission to email me. I am not trying to be arrogant, but I HATE unsolicited email with a passion. Richard Hey Richard, anytime someone asks for information, and supplies their email address, the reply is solicited, by definition. |
#8
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"Peter Gottlieb" wrote in message
et... [...] My domain is optonline.net, which is a major cable internet ISP. If you block optonline.net then you stop email from millions of legitimate addresses. Why you replied by email, I don't know. However, as far as the blocked domain goes, it's likely he has nothing to do with that. Probably his ISP is using one of those obnoxious black-hole lists that automatically detects spam and adds IP ranges from which the spam originated to its database. Of course, since a third of all spam these days is being sent from compromised but otherwise legitimate users, this sort of idiotic solution results in innocent bystanders getting their email blocked. My ISP provides this kind of "service", and once I found out what was going on, I told them to disable it for my email. I don't get any more spam than I used to, and I don't have friends and family complaining that they can't send me email anymore. Pete |
#9
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In article ,
Peter Duniho wrote: Probably his ISP is using one of those obnoxious black-hole lists that automatically detects spam and adds IP ranges from which the spam originated to its database. The problem is that some people get so much spam that if they didn't take drastic filtering measures they wouldn't get your email anyway -- they wouldn't have time to sift through the spam looking for it. Of course, since a third of all spam these days is being sent from compromised but otherwise legitimate users, this sort of idiotic solution results in innocent bystanders getting their email blocked. Not really. 'Compromised' broadband users infected with viruses that turn them into spam zombies should still be sending their legitimate email through their ISP's server, which will not be on the DUL-style lists I assume you are refering to. There is plenty of collateral damage from IP blocking, but the cause of those blocks is usually ISP supported spam. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#10
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"Ben Jackson" wrote in message
news:RSR5c.27524$JL2.318706@attbi_s03... The problem is that some people get so much spam that if they didn't take drastic filtering measures they wouldn't get your email anyway -- they wouldn't have time to sift through the spam looking for it. Did you read my post? I had my ISP *** DISABLE *** the black-hole list functionality for my email account, and it produced NO CHANGE in the amount of spam I receive. Not only was it blocking legitimate email, it turned out it did not appear to be blocking any spam that SpamAssassin (which my ISP also runs) wasn't already catching. Obviously it is possible to filter out spam without resorting to such drastic measures. Not really. 'Compromised' broadband users infected with viruses that turn them into spam zombies should still be sending their legitimate email through their ISP's server, which will not be on the DUL-style lists I assume you are refering to. You have no clue about what you're talking about. The reason that I had my ISP disable the black-hole list was that domains such as aol.com, comcast.com, and cox.net were being blocked. These are all "respectable" ISPs who take a no-tolerance stance toward their users sending spam. The same tool, by the way, was blocking another friend's email because he was running his own email server behind a dynamic IP address. Yet another inappropriately blocked, perfectly legitimate source of email. Your claim that those sources of email "will not be on the DUL-style lists" is just plain wrong. There is plenty of collateral damage from IP blocking, but the cause of those blocks is usually ISP supported spam. Baloney. I receive practically no email from anyone using an ISP that supports spam. I doubt I know ANYONE who uses an ISP that supports spam. And yet email sent to me was getting blocked on a regular basis, because those spam-intolerant ISPs that my friends and family do use were still getting blocked. Do you really believe that Ben or his ISP at rrcnet.org have blocked the optonline.net domain as a spamming network legitimately? Pete |
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