See the following link. By using "I'm Feeling Lucky", a spammer just has to rank at the top of google's searches for *any* search, meaningful or not.
http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLC,GG... 969-53,GGLC:en&q=blank+check+paper%2C+magnetic+ink+for+inkjets&btnI=I'm% 20Feeling%20Lucky
Matthew Wilson, MCSE (2003), MCSA-Messaging Network Administrator matthew@boomer.com Boomer Consulting, Inc. 610 Humboldt Manhattan, KS 66502 http://www.boomer.com http://www.boomer.com/ 1-888-266-6375 x 17
On Wednesday, March 23, 2005, 5:38:59 AM, Matthew Wilson wrote:
See the following link. By using "I'm Feeling Lucky", a spammer just has to rank at the top of google's searches for *any* search, meaningful or not.
http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGLC,GG... 969-53,GGLC:en&q=blank+check+paper%2C+magnetic+ink+for+inkjets&btnI=I'm% 20Feeling%20Lucky
Matthew Wilson, MCSE (2003), MCSA-Messaging Network Administrator matthew@boomer.com Boomer Consulting, Inc. 610 Humboldt Manhattan, KS 66502 http://www.boomer.com http://www.boomer.com/ 1-888-266-6375 x 17
One solution would be to see if Google will consider not listing spammer domains, but I'm not sure they'd want to do that. It's useful for anti-spammers to be able to google the bad guys, for example.
Jeff C. -- "If it appears in hams, then don't list it."