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The RSS feeds use new (.NET) code that takes advantage of the upgraded article attribution, whereas the homepage uses the old (ASP) version. I'm gradually moving bits and pieces over to .NET and this is one of the few cases you'll notice a difference.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote:
The only time someone else will see your email address is if you reply to a message of theirs, or use the 'Email' link in a message posting. Your adress is then sent with the message but only to that person.
Personally, I don't like that either. Is it possible to prevent this as well?
Ryan "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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On the spam issue - to be honest I just don't have the time nor inclination to go through the CP website looking for holes. What I'll do is setup a new email account for my CP profile and see how it goes. If/when I receive any spam in it, I'll let you know.
The blogless coder
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Furty wrote:
I just don't have the time nor inclination to go through the CP website looking for holes
Sorry - that wasn't the intention of my comment. I meant that if you *do* see anything, let me know, because we do try our best to protect members from spam. Remember that spammers are always using brute force attacks against ISPs so why not try setting up 2 accounts: one you use on CodeProject and one that sits there as a control. If they both get hammered then it's not us. If the CP one gets abused then we look further to see what's happening.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote:
so why not try setting up 2 accounts: one you use on CodeProject and one that sits there as a control. If they both get hammered then it's not us. If the CP one gets abused then we look further to see what's happening
Have done, will let you know how it goes..
The blogless coder
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Chris Maunder wrote:
2. We do. Your email address is not posted on the site. If you can find your email address exposed then please let us know. The only time someone else will see your email address is if you reply to a message of theirs, or use the 'Email' link in a message posting. Your adress is then sent with the message but only to that person.
The only place I've found that spammers pick-up CP email addresses is from the Industry Contacts page... but I doubt there is anything you can do about that without negating the whole point of the page.
Of course, I'm a little unhappy that the email address is sent with each reply notification as I've received a number of unsolicted questions and cries for help because of it. An option to not show the email address would be great.
Michael
CP Blog [^]
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Furty wrote:
Why don't you protect your members from spam?
From where I'm sitting they do. Also, that kind of interogation is likely to raise the heckles a bit.
Furty wrote:
I setup a special email account purely for CP, and it's just breached 60 spam emails a day
Me too. And it isn't. I never received spam on that email account until I signed up for a YahooGroups list on the same email account. I've now switched email accounts again and it is spam free again.
"If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him, for an investment in knowledge pays the best interest." -- Joseph E. O'Donnell
Not getting the response you want from a question asked in an online forum: How to Ask Questions the Smart Way!
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
that kind of interogation is likely to raise the heckles a bit.
Nah, it's cool. I hate spam as much as the next person and I'd want to know that the person I give my email address to is looking after it.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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How about moving the public forums to one or two servers and use the rest for everything else? It looks like there is around 300-1,000 new posts per day in the forums. There would be quite a number more for people reading them, but if they are one their own series of servers, the system would not slow down when someone tries to archive the entire site. The forums would continue to run at full pace.
Rocky <><
www.HintsAndTips.com - Now with GMail Queue
www.MyQuickPoll.com - 2004 Election poll is #33
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Is it possible to provide an option whereby our email addresses are not shown to the people we respond to? Currently, an email-notification response includes the email address of the person who sent the reply. It would be much better if the email address was not provided, or at least an option to remove it (permanently or per-post maybe).
Ryan "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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I have suggested this in the past. I think it would certainly cut down on the number of unsolicted questions I get asked via email after I've responded to a post.
I don't see the relevance of having the email address in the mail, surely the username is enough.
Michael
CP Blog [^]
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Michael P Butler wrote:
I think it would certainly cut down on the number of unsolicted questions I get asked via email after I've responded to a post.
Yeah same here. Or when people respond to your answer by emailing direct, rather than on the forum. I've had that happen lots of times as well.
Michael P Butler wrote:
I don't see the relevance of having the email address in the mail, surely the username is enough.
Absolutely. It's not used for anything at all, other than spam of course
Ryan "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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Two things I would like to see.
1. All new posts mentioning the word "GMail" should be automatically rejected as unacceptable content.
2. A per-user filter where we could prevent any post with the word GMail from appearing in the downloaded page would be nice.
Ryan "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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Ryan Binns wrote:
All new posts mentioning the word "GMail" should be automatically rejected as unacceptable content.
But by that standard, your post would not have been accepted! And what if someone has a legitimate question about G-mail? Should we ostracize them?
Ryan Binns wrote:
A per-user filter where we could prevent any post with the word GMail from appearing in the downloaded page would be nice.
Isn't that a little extreme? And if the word "GMail" was excluded, what would the post contain in it's stead, "*****"? It would be really ugly to have a post about GMail that only had a bunch "*" on the page.
Also, what would be done about articles about G-mail? Would the person have to change their filter just to view the article?
Aaron Eldreth
TheCollective4.com
My Articles
I hereby boycott this poll. Really....
- Leppie
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Aaron Eldreth wrote:
But by that standard, your post would not have been accepted!
It wouldn't need to be because there would be no other posts about it, which is the whole problem in the first place.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
And what if someone has a legitimate question about G-mail? Should we ostracize them?
If they ask anywhere except the GMail forum then yes.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
Isn't that a little extreme?
No.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
And if the word "GMail" was excluded, what would the post contain in it's stead, "*****"? It would be really ugly to have a post about GMail that only had a bunch "*" on the page.
It's already really ugly to have a post about GMail in the first place. I'm talking about completely removing any post that mentions it. Not just the word. The whole message... as if it doesn't exist.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
Also, what would be done about articles about G-mail? Would the person have to change their filter just to view the article?
People can view whatever articles they like. The problem is in the message boards, where the one message board is used for lots of topics. GMail was completely taking over the lounge and as far as I know the soapbox as well (I never visit the soapbox. I'm just going on what I've heard).
I have no problems with GMail itself. What I do have a problem with is the ridiculously huge amounts of messagesspam that people have been posting about it. It got sickening after the first couple of days of it, and that was ages ago. If it doesn't stop I will have no choice but to leave CP.
Ryan "Punctuality is only a virtue for those who aren't smart enough to think of good excuses for being late" John Nichol "Point Of Impact"
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Ryan Binns wrote:
It wouldn't need to be because there would be no other posts about it, which is the whole problem in the first place.
So now we come back to the paradox. Which should have come first?
Ryan Binns wrote:
If they ask anywhere except the GMail forum then yes.
I agree with that, though you did not specify that in your original post.
Ryan Binns wrote:
It's already really ugly to have a post about GMail in the first place. I'm talking about completely removing any post that mentions it. Not just the word. The whole message... as if it doesn't exist.
I'm slightly confused. You said "I'm talking about completely removing any post that mentions it." Does that include the G-mail forum?
I'll assume that you meant remove from any forum but the G-mail one. What if someone makes a joke about G-mail? Should their post be rejected because of a joke?
Ryan Binns wrote:
GMail was completely taking over the lounge
Hmmm..... I can see the headlines now. "The CodeProject Lounge Netscaped by G-mail"
Ryan Binns wrote:
If it doesn't stop I will have no choice but to leave CP.
That is extreme. If it irritates you so, why not just stop visiting the lounge?
--
Aaron Eldreth
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Aaron Eldreth wrote:
So now we come back to the paradox. Which should have come first?
Some level of respect for others from people posting spam about it would have been nice. But they had none, so we have a spam problem as a result.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
I agree with that, though you did not specify that in your original post.
That's because I wrote it before the forum existed.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
I'll assume that you meant remove from any forum but the G-mail one.
That's right.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
What if someone makes a joke about G-mail? Should their post be rejected because of a joke?
I don't see why not. As I said, it would be a filter that people could individually turn on/off as they wanted. People can read what they like.
Aaron Eldreth wrote:
why not just stop visiting the lounge?
I don't visit much else on the site. The VC++ forum, a couple articles here and there. The lounge used to be really good fun before GMail came along and took over. Now that the forum's been made, I'll wait and see what happens.
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How about a ban on Political comments in the SoapBox.
Amleth Ojalen
ABLogFile - a realtime log viewer, a work in progress
ABBaseCalc - a simple base converter
ABHotKeys - you don't know the functionality your missing out on till you use it.
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That's what the SoapBox is there for. It catches all political comments, and keeps the other forums clean.
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What about keeping the soap box clean ?
Amleth Ojalen
ABLogFile - a realtime log viewer, a work in progress
ABBaseCalc - a simple base converter
ABHotKeys - you don't know the functionality your missing out on till you use it.
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amleth wrote:
What about keeping the soap box clean?
Some things just aren't meant to happen.
Aaron Eldreth
TheCollective4.com
My Articles
I hereby boycott this poll. Really....
- Leppie
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Aaron Eldreth wrote:
Some things just aren't meant to happen
Like water running up hill. Except that there is a strange geological phenomena on the west coast of Scotland at a place called the Electric Brae[^] where water, balls, wheels, vehicles etc. do run up hill.
"If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him, for an investment in knowledge pays the best interest." -- Joseph E. O'Donnell
Not getting the response you want from a question asked in an online forum: How to Ask Questions the Smart Way!
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Like water running up hill.
Exactly. Or like making a C++ developer learn Vb.
Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Except that ...
I think that there are exceptions to everyting. Except the ban on G-mail invites in the lounge.
Aaron Eldreth
TheCollective4.com
My Articles
I used to be indecisive,
but now I'm not too sure
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Aaron Eldreth wrote:
I think that there are exceptions to everyting.
It is the exception that proves the rule.
From the C.A.M. department of Education: And before anyone says: How can an exception "prove" a rule? If it an exception it should disprove the rule. I would like to point out that the word prove comes from Latin and the direct translation back to English is "to test".
"If a man empties his purse into his head, no man can take it away from him, for an investment in knowledge pays the best interest." -- Joseph E. O'Donnell
Not getting the response you want from a question asked in an online forum: How to Ask Questions the Smart Way!
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
It is the exception that proves the rule.
You are correct as usual Colin.
--
Aaron Eldreth
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