1) Is there no spam filter for this group; or else all messages of
buying inc, drugs and related spam would not be here
2) There is a spam filter but it sucks.
If it's 1) then who is responsible for this group, and can this person
please activate a filter?
If it's 2). How come google with all the indexed data and knowledge of
algorithms can't produce something better?
Either way; this group is great, and I enjoy reading your LISP
discussions, but it's getting tiresome with all the SPAM.
Apparently you don't understand how usenet works (or doesn't work :-) I
would suggest that you subscribe to a provider that does decent spam
filtering, I use http://news.individual.net/ but there are other good
ones. It will cost money, but it is worth it.
Tamas
> Either way; this group is great, and I enjoy reading your LISP
> discussions, but it's getting tiresome with all the SPAM.
Spam! Where do you see spam? I don't see spam here.
Well, drink a good Duff, eat some spam and watch this movie:
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cFrtpT1mKy8>
Cheers,
--
Jacques.
> Given the amount of crap postings in this LISP group i must believe
> one of the following
>
> 1) Is there no spam filter for this group; or else all messages of
> buying inc, drugs and related spam would not be here
> 2) There is a spam filter but it sucks.
>
> If it's 1) then who is responsible for this group, and can this person
> please activate a filter?
It's 1). The person responsible is at the loo. I'll tell him as soon
as he gets back. So the problem should be corrected soon. Good
reading of the newsgroups!
--
__Pascal Bourguignon__
Nonsense. Where else am I going to do my shopping and meet bank clerks
in Africa with ten million dollar notes?
kzo
Spam is filtered by the news provider and/or by the group moderator(s)
if the group is moderated. This group is not moderated.
George
Bear in mind that comp.lang.lisp is an unmoderated Usenet newsgroup, not
a mailing list or other plain Google group. Therefore, there is no
centralized filtering point for it. If the spam bothers you, access it
through a news reader that lets you effectively block it, or through a
news provider which provides good filtering.
My Usenet provider (aioe) does a quite good job of keeping spam away.
- Michael
--
mouse, n: A device for pointing at the xterm in which you want to type.
How is you child Willy?
3) The Lisp community welcome spam because they rely upon it to boost usenet
traffic when comparing the popularity of Lisp to other programming
languages.
4) Spammers have discovered that the people in comp.lang.lisp are unusually
likely to fall for scams so they are focussing their efforts here.
--
Dr Jon D Harrop, Flying Frog Consultancy Ltd.
http://www.ffconsultancy.com/?u
>
> 3) The Lisp community welcome spam because they rely upon it to boost usenet
> traffic when comparing the popularity of Lisp to other programming
> languages.
In other breaking news, War is Peace; Freedom is Slavery; Ignorance is
Strength. Film at 11.
First the irish ship of the desert; then the microsoft musical note;
is your current language Newspeak?
>
> 4) Spammers have discovered that the people in comp.lang.lisp are unusually
> likely to fall for scams so they are focussing their efforts here.
>
Wishful thinking, O Lord of the comp.lang Spammers.
You are right. I fell very hard for the "Ruby Guy" spam :)
Cheers
--
Marco
> Given the amount of crap postings in this LISP group i must believe
> one of the following
>
> 1) Is there no spam filter for this group; or else all messages of
> buying inc, drugs and related spam would not be here
Unmoderated groups don't have specific spam filters. However, there are
people out there who provide `feeds' which identify spam messages. The
system is called `NoCeM' (pronounced `no see 'em'). Feeds are
transmitted over Usenet itself, in groups like alt.nocem.misc, or
news.lists.filters. The feeds are PGP-signed to prevent forgery.
Since my local news admin (err, that'd be me) started accepting these
groups and acting on them, I've noticed a very marked reduction in the
amount of spam I see.
You should either switch to a news client which can process NoCeM
messages, or to a news server which filters its news spool.
> Either way; this group is great, and I enjoy reading your LISP
> discussions, but it's getting tiresome with all the SPAM.
The whole of Usenet is covered with spam about watches and drugs; it's
not just comp.lang.lisp. Fortunately, if you have a decent news feed or
client, you won't have to put up with the spam.
-- [mdw]
Jonny, you response is trollish (as usual) and completely useless and unhelpful
(ditto). The spam experienced by Gianfranco is a consequence of using Google
Groups. Most of it orginates within Google Groups itself, and is uniformly the
same no matter which newsgroup you select for reading via Google Groups.
> 4) Spammers have discovered that the people in comp.lang.lisp are unusually
> likely to fall for scams so they are focussing their efforts here.
Exercise: name one Lisp-targetted spammer other than Jon Harrop.
That cannot be true: I see a huge amount of spam only in comp.lang.lisp and
I am not using Google Groups.
> Exercise: name one Lisp-targetted spammer other than Jon Harrop.
www.iofferkicks.com
grain dryer
interesting article
nike shoes
guoshit...@126.com
All spammed comp.lang.lisp and none of the other groups I subscribe to in
the past 24 hours.
> If it's 1) then who is responsible for this group, and can this person
> please activate a filter?
There is a fundamental misconception going on here.
In the nature of unmoderated newsgroups, there is nobody who is
responsible for this group. It is an open forum, and therefore anyone
can post any article about anything.
Off topic posts are disouraged by ettiquette, but obviously in the case
of spammers, that approach doesn't work.
So, you will have to see to your own spam filtering.
--
Thomas A. Russ, USC/Information Sciences Institute
>First the irish ship of the desert; ...
This one I didn't get and my Irish grandmothers aren't alive to ask.
What does it mean?
George
Doh! Zach just clued me in. I was stupidly looking for some old
Irish saying.
George