From: | Richard Lane |
Date: | 10 Aug 2001 at 23:27:07 |
Subject: | Re: [D5] UNSUBSCRIBE |
Hello Malcolm,
Thursday, August 09, 2001, 10:36:52 PM, you wrote:
> UNSUBSCRIBE MALKY@NOBLEONE.U-NET.COM
Try sticking "dopus5" after unsubscribe.
> --
> Email majordomo@lss.com.au with 'help' in the body for help.
> Members posting binaries to the mailing list will be removed!
> --
III. UNSUBSCRIBING FROM MAILING LISTS
Your original intro message contains the exact command which should be
used to remove your address from the list. However, in most cases, you
may simply send the command "unsubscribe" followed by the list name:
unsubscribe demo-list
(This command may fail if your provider has changed the way your
address is shown in your mail.)
To remove an address other than the one from which you're sending
the request, give that address in the command:
unsubscribe demo-list jqpublic@my-isp.com
In either of these cases, you can tell Majordomo@lss.com.au to remove
the address in question from all lists on this server by using "*"
in place of the list name:
unsubscribe *
unsubscribe * jqpublic@my-isp.com
IV. FINDING THE LISTS TO WHICH AN ADDRESS IS SUBSCRIBED
To find the lists to which your address is subscribed, send this command
in the body of a mail message to Majordomo@lss.com.au:
which
You can look for other addresses, or parts of an address, by specifying
the text for which Majordomo should search. For instance, to find which
users at my-isp.com are subscribed to which lists, you might send the
command
which my-isp.com
Note that many list owners completely or fully disable the "which"
command, considering it a privacy violation.