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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 118 responses total. |
denise
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response 25 of 118:
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Feb 16 15:48 UTC 2007 |
I know in the past I've tried to finger those in conferences that I'm a fw
of, to see who and how long its been since those users have checked into the
conf. But it was taking forever and a day, so I finally got out of it. Though
I'm not sure how relevent that is to this current conversation. :-)
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aruba
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response 26 of 118:
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Feb 17 01:22 UTC 2007 |
Re #23: The conversation I was referring to was
resp:agora56,4,87-106
Unfortunately all of Dan's responses have been scribbled. I can't quite
reconstruct what was said, but it's clear I was confused by the answer, and
I'm still confused. Bruce Howard said this in response 97:
It appears if you log in with a non-interactive shell, for example:
"ssh grex.org bash -i"
no login record is made.
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glenda
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response 27 of 118:
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Feb 17 03:02 UTC 2007 |
STeve is planning on doing backups and, if possible, replacing the flacky disk
tomorrow.
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cross
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response 28 of 118:
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Feb 17 04:19 UTC 2007 |
Regarding #26; Yah, that was sort of for work. Long story (and one I can't
really explain anyway).
Perhaps the discussion was for non-interactive shells. E.g., when one does,
``ssh cyberspace.org ls'' and things like that (incidentally, that's what is
happening when one does ssh cyberspace.org bash -i...).
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janc
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response 29 of 118:
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Feb 19 15:53 UTC 2007 |
Well, STeve did a backup, and Joe did a reap (probably the first since we
moved to OpenBSD). I guess we'll soon find out if this was a problem. I'd
be surprised if there weren't at least a few people among the 48,000 or so
that we deleted that maybe shouldn't have been. I did spend some time before
the reap adding people to the immortals list whom I thought ought to be there.
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keesan
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response 30 of 118:
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Feb 19 16:05 UTC 2007 |
That should fix /var/mail for quite a while. Thanks.
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gelinas
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response 31 of 118:
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Feb 20 02:56 UTC 2007 |
Yes, it was the first reap since December, 2004.
Since /var/mail is down to 38%, it probably will be fine. For a while.
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keesan
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response 32 of 118:
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Feb 20 03:51 UTC 2007 |
Did you reap a lot of mail accounts without any mail or spam in them?
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keesan
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response 33 of 118:
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Feb 20 03:57 UTC 2007 |
Why do some accounts have 20MB of mail in them? For instance munkey, whose
mail account is dated Sept 18. I thought we had a 1MB limit. Is something
broken? Munkey last logged on Feb 15 but may have abandoned the mail account
to the spammers. Is there some way to tell if an account is being used to
forward mail, and if not, reap it after 3 months of disuse?
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gelinas
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response 34 of 118:
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Feb 20 04:05 UTC 2007 |
Re your first question: No idea; we don't track that statistic.
Re your second question: the quota was raised some time back.
As to your third question: What (other) people do, or don't do, with their
mailboxes is not really any of my, or your, business.
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nharmon
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response 35 of 118:
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Feb 20 13:09 UTC 2007 |
I agree with Joe.
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keesan
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response 36 of 118:
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Feb 20 15:48 UTC 2007 |
Re question three, since new users are not being given mail accounts without
requesting them, and since many or most of the old users with mail accounts
probably are not using them for anything, would it make sense to reduce the
number of unused mail accounts of people who are not doing ANYTHING with their
mailboxes and did not want them in the first place. Note the '3 months of
disuse'. I was not suggesting keeping people from forwarding mail.
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cross
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response 37 of 118:
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Feb 20 16:10 UTC 2007 |
I think the reap process works rather well; we just cleared out over 40,000
accounts. Unfortunately, we're not doing opt-in email yet.
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keesan
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response 38 of 118:
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Feb 20 18:05 UTC 2007 |
What is the new mailbox limit? I have been forwarding anything over 100K to
another account. What are 5000 people still using grex for if not mail?
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cmcgee
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response 39 of 118:
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Feb 20 18:16 UTC 2007 |
Assuming the reap was the standard "not active in the past 90 days" and that
newuser was off for nearly 9 months, I'm amazed and delighted that we still
provide service for 5000 people!!
Now, for the sobering thought, how do we know how many of those are spammers?
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cross
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response 40 of 118:
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Feb 20 18:21 UTC 2007 |
Regarding #38; I have no idea. Maybe you could ask them. I doubt very highly
that it's email: most people aren't interested in the 1980's style of email
experience that grex offers.
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maus
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response 41 of 118:
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Feb 20 18:31 UTC 2007 |
I only keep email on here because I am loathe to lose an internet
address I've had for almost a decade (IIRC).
I use GREX as a sandbox for shell scripting and for backtalk
communities.
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slynne
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response 42 of 118:
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Feb 20 19:48 UTC 2007 |
I dont really use email here but I do forward it to another account.
Every now and then someone I havent talked to in a while sends me email
to my grex account and it is nice to be able to still get it. Of
course, nowadays I get so much spam at that account I probably would
miss any personal emails sent to me.
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steve
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response 43 of 118:
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Feb 20 20:29 UTC 2007 |
Actually, there are still a lot of people that are trying to use
Grex for email. I've talked with many who've expressed a distrust
in the mail systems they have access to and like the idea of the
little independant entity. We're getting rid of them however with
the amounts of spam they get.
People use Grex for all sorts of reasons. There are *still*
classes in C programming where instructors point students to us
for their homework. There are still a lot of people who hear
of Grex as a place to learn about unix, and sometimes about
OpenBSD itself. Lots of people seem to like using lynx here
because they have some privacy. I helped one person several
years ago use it for looking up about a disease a family
member had, that they were reticent to look up at work. Lots
of people check out party. How they get to Grex and then wind
up there quickly I'm not sure, but it happens. This doesn't
touch on the conferences.
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cross
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response 44 of 118:
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Feb 20 22:37 UTC 2007 |
I think things like, ``a lot'' and ``lots'' are relative. Steve, could you
quantify them? If 500 people use grex for email, that may seem like ``a
lot'' but compared to the overall population of the Internet, or even of
grex users, or even to the places where many of us work, it's really pretty
small. Handling email for them, with decent spam filtering, really
shouldn't be a problem on grex's over-powerful server.
If 100 distinct people check out party over the course of six months, I'll
be pleasantly surprised.
If a university or high school (outside of the Ann Arbor area) somewhere in
the United States or Western Europe points to grex for a C programming
class, or *any* programming or Unix class for that matter, I'll be pleased
but similarly surprised. To the extent that we're getting these people, I
suspect they are coming from abroad, and that as the technology wave
continues to roll over even 3rd world countries, their numbers will decline.
I suspect a lot of the people who use grex are those who are curious about
public access systems, or want a more private place to do web browsing and
the like, as Steve said. Some want to move files around, and the like,
also. And there's nothing wrong with that; those are the kind of uses we
*should* be encouraging. I feel affirmed that someone makes use of grex to
do something useful, like find information about diseases that affect his or
her life. I think it's great if people use grex for homework or scientific
study (I recall a few years ago, some guy sent email to staff asking if he
could run some fairly computationally FORTRAN programs on grex; I thought
that was really cool. It's certainly the type of use we should be
encouraging). We should encourage more of that.
Steve, do you have any pointers on who these people are? We should try and
figure out how they found grex and how we can get more like them.
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keesan
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response 45 of 118:
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Feb 20 23:06 UTC 2007 |
If the mail accounts which have not been accessed for three months and do not
have forwards on them were removed, how many people would still be using grex
mail? Someone should be able to figure this out from last access times at
least for non-forwarding accounts. Then check for .forward files. With few
enough active users spam filtering would be more practical and then grex email
would be more attractive for people to use.
I used grex for most of my email until it had too much downtime and I still
use it for anything noncritical. I do most of my browsing here with lynx
because it is usually faster than directly via my modem connection.
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cross
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response 46 of 118:
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Feb 20 23:44 UTC 2007 |
Well, since we did a reap like, three days ago, and only around 6200 accounts,
not that says that the number is less than 6200 users.
I'm not sure we should be making grex *email* more attractive to use. If
anything, we probably should be discouraging people from using grex for email
as anything but a last resort.
Look: the reality of it is that the email problem has just gotten too hard
for what grex can handle with its *staff* resources. And that's not going
to change. We can do a reasonable job for a couple of hundred users, but
anything beyond that just isn't going to work out without a full-time staff
looking after mail. Such is the way of the world; please learn that we're
just going to have to deal with that reality. Unless someone just doesn't
have another choice, they really should look elsewhere for email (e.g.,
hotmail, yahoo, gmail, etc).
If someone wants to use grex because they don't trust the others, then fine,
but they're going to have to deal with all the spam and unreliability.
Again, the thing that's lacking here is *staff*, not machine resources.
Technically, it can be done, but not without a lot of hand holding. It sucks,
but that's what happens when a network takes an infrastructure designed in
the 1970's for a closed environment of trusted individuals and thrusts it into
the 21st century on an untrustable network.
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keesan
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response 47 of 118:
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Feb 21 01:40 UTC 2007 |
I only get about 3 spams a day at worst and pine at grex is infinitely faster
and more convenient than any webmail. How much handholding would it take to
just filter all incoming mail with spamd?
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glenda
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response 48 of 118:
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Feb 21 02:09 UTC 2007 |
Re #45: If an account is active, it is allowed to have an email account
whether it is used or not. Other than not using the account for spamming,
it is not our business what email is going into or out of the account. As
long as the user account is active, the mailbox can remain full and new mail
getting rejected. It doesn't matter if there is a .forward or not. If the
user account is active, staff does not make it a habit to go looking in the
account to see if there is a .forward or not, it is none of our business.
If staff starts doing this or is required to this I will no longer be staff.
It is an invasion of privacy. If the user account is not active, then the
account and its attached email account will be reaped during the next reap
session.
I would not want staff poking around in my account just because it thought
that I might or might not be making use of the email account that was created
along with my user account, nor would I as staff be doing that to other user's
accounts.
You have been told many times that spam is a problem. It will not go away.
There is not a hell of a lot we can do about it. Even if we put system wide
spam filters in place, people will have to be able to opt out of them. I for
one do not want anyone else filtering my email. My email is my private
business as long as I am not trying to spam with it, I will deal with it
myself, no one else can make the decision for me on what is spam and what
isn't.
As for var/mail filling, we are working on ways to deal with it that don't
involve invading users' privacy. We just did a huge reap that should take
care of the problem for now. We are looking into getting more space for
var/mail. It takes time. Please give us the time without doing any more
harping about the situation. We are aware of it. We all deal with it in our
professional and personal lives. You only have to deal with it for you, we
have others besides ourselves that we have to deal with it for. We just can't
keep up with the deviousness of the jerks that send the stuff. At least not
right now, this very minute. The whole world is having the same problem.
A lot of money is being lost in both business and government because of it.
Continuous berating staff about it will not make it go away any faster.
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keesan
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response 49 of 118:
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Feb 21 02:25 UTC 2007 |
Is there some way current users can opt out of having mail accounts?
You don't have to look in an account to see if mail is being forwarded, you
look to see if there is a .forward file, as far as I know. Could the 1MB
limit on mail accounts be restored, with larger accounts on request for those
who actually use the accounts?
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