I have a friend in San Francisco who has a very good email address:
tom@aol.com
The last year, I sent an email to him to his email address, and not surprisingly, I got a reply like this
From: —–
Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 6:53:40 AM
To: jianshuo@hotmail.com
This is an automated response – please read carefully. “Tom@aol.com”
receives several hundred eMails per day that are not intended for myself
but were addressed incorrectly. As a result I can only accept eMail from
known eMail addresses – your eMail address is not YET known to my eMail
Filter.
*****************************************************************
***Please verify that you are trying to reach ——- @ BV.
***If that is the case, please reply to this Auto Response and
***include “To Tom” in the subject line***
***This will get your eMail past my filter directly into my Inbox.
******************************************************************
I apologize for any inconvenience this has caused you – once I receive
your eMail with “To Tom” in the subject line I will add you to my
filteras a “Known Sender” and you should be able to reach me easily for
as long as you use the same eMail address.
Your original eMail with headers is below. If there was an attachment,
please re-atttach that again if possible.
Thank you!
Tom
I think I don’t think there is too much problem for disclosing my friend’s email address since tom @ aol.com, just as example@microsoft.com, or jack@yahoo.com, is one of the most often used testing email address people may think of. It is so funny to have this “good email address” problem. I do believe he will get several hundred emails to his mail box, and maybe adding two or three after I publish this article. Good luck to Tom.
Haha, so funny.
Quite funny… Same for smith@yahoo.com should have lot of email because I often sign with this email address, as I do not want to give mine.