| Email, All-Star Dancers and Essay Conest for Kids
Manatees fans desiring a response to an email should turn off any filter or SPAM blocker, or accept info@spacecoaststadium.com as a legitimate email address. We answer 100% of our emails but many times we run into email blockers like EarthLink which requires us to register with them again and again just to send you a baseball camp registration form or a group photo from last night's game. Please either change your email filter settings to accept our email address or create a free email account on Yahoo! or gmail (Google)...they're free and will get you your response very quickly. If you don't receive a response from us it's because of your email settings blocking us. We don't have the hours in the day to keep registering with EarthLink and some of the other protection servcies. Former Brevard County Manatees Catcher 'Sweet' Lou Palmisano's fiance, Katherine, is one of three finalists in the Miami Heat's Dance Contest.
Authentication sets stage for reputation as spam increases
Industry adoption of e-mail authentication set the stage for Internet service providers to begin focusing on reputation in 2006. AOL and Goodmail successfully tested CertifiedMail, compelling senders to follow best practices to avoid having their e-mail relegated to the junk folder.Industry adoption of e-mail authentication set the stage for Internet service providers to begin focusing on reputation in 2006. "The test showed that a stamp of approval could raise the return on an e-mail program by enough to pay for that stamp," said Kevin Johnson, president of Acxiom Digital, San Francisco. "Assuming initial pilots continue to earn positive user feedback and financial returns, expect postage to proliferate and the development of classes of e-mail." This year also saw a number of key legal actions in the e-mail space brought on by ISPs and the FTC against senders for non-compliance with CAN-SPAM.
What have image spam and Captchas got in common?
Computers can't understand either of them, because they can't actually read. To a computer, letters that form part of a graphic image are a picture, which it can't process, or read, as it does with text characters. By contrast, a human is able to read both sets of letters in the same way. Captchas (completely automated public Turing test to tell computers and humans apart) are designed to determine whether an input to a web page - commenting on a blog post, or signing up for an online service - actually comes from a human or a computer (probably programmed to post advertisements or other junk). While you wait, the Captcha - a term trademarked by Carnegie Mellon University - generates a graphic on the fly and asks you to read and type in the letters and/or numbers that appear. Which is easy for most humans, but next-to-impossible for a computer.
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