What happened here seems to be another spam recipients data was sent to you. It would seem that Juno could choose to strip out the name and address of this person before sending the example to you. Perhaps the person doing the spam eradication work did not realize that leaving the name in compromised that person. Perhaps you could forward the message to that person, unless that would, in turn, violate your privacy to send. OTOH, it seems Juno is actually trying to do something to discourage the SPAM. I had given up on sending Juno stuff of that sort, and use other means to extinguish spam. thepccat On Thu, 11 Jul 2002 06:37:40 -0400 Leslie S Gottlieb <lesliepearson@xxxxxxxx> writes: > > I e-mailed Juno about getting spam feedback with SOMEONE else's spam > complaint attached. This is their response. I've written back > pointing > out that this IS an extreme violation of privacy. (Of the 2 letters I > got, I am not even sure I had reported one of them.)[...] ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less! Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit: http://dl.www.juno.com/get/web/. To unsubscribe, send a message to ecartis@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with "unsubscribe juno_accmail" in the body or subject. OR visit //freelists.org ~*~