Please read. Significant change on the site that will affect compatibility [ Dismiss ]
Home ยป Forum ยป Editors/Reviewers Hangout

Forum: Editors/Reviewers Hangout

Need an editor for Nick Scipio's Summer camp fan fiction story

rodav555 ๐Ÿšซ

I have a Summer camp fan fiction story. It's about the first time Paul and Gina were allowed to join their parents private swing party.

It's titled "Paul's inner feelings"

It's the mixed feelings of Paul as he watches his own dear Mother having sex.

I would need an editor to have a second look and fix some grammars or punctuations if need be.

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@rodav555

If this is 'authorized' fan fiction, then you might have better luck asking on Nick's Patreon and/or Discord servers.

rodav555 ๐Ÿšซ

Yes, I was authorized by Nick to write a Summer camp fan fiction.

Replies:   Goldfisherman
Goldfisherman ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@rodav555

It sounds interesting. I can volunteer as I am a pretty fair proofreader. I can use and have over a dozen dictionaries including Webster's. I also can do Office Word, ODT, .TXT and a shift amongst several different document writers (Word Processors)including editing PDF.

send me an e-mail with a direct address.

rodav555 ๐Ÿšซ

Thanks Goldfisherman. I can't find a way to send you a direct email. Would it be ok I'll just post my email address here?

Replies:   Ross at Play
Ross at Play ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@rodav555

I can't find a way to send you a direct email.

I was going to suggest that you right-click on the name 'Goldfisherman'. It is underlined which indicates an author page exists and a right-click gets you there. But the option to receive emails is turned off on his profile.

For the information of others here, I asked the webmaster about this kind of situation recently: how can an editor contact an author who doesn't have an author page yet, because they haven't posted their first story?

The answer was, for now, one or the other must post an email address here unless the potential editor has either an editor profile or an author page with the email option set.

However, that will be resolved when the next upgrade of the internal messaging system is released. I gather that release is going to allow private messages to be sent to posters who are only registered on the site as readers.

Goldfisherman ๐Ÿšซ

@Ross at Play

Send me an e-mail through SOL under "authors" "Goldfisherman". Include your e-mail direct and I will include my direct e-mail. I have broadband. Attachments OK.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Ross at Play

For the information of others here, I asked the webmaster about this kind of situation recently: how can an editor contact an author who doesn't have an author page yet, because they haven't posted their first story?

You can post emails online, but there are many online spambots (programs designed to view public sites searching for openly stated emails for them to dump with useless spam) looking for them. If you choose that option, you don't want to type out the full address, but instead use "username at service provider dot com".

For now, at least, the spambots seems unable to read the plain text version of email addresses.

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

you don't want to type out the full address, but instead use "username at service provider dot com".

Since that trick has become quite common the spam bots anticipate that and find these with ease. The most reliable way so far is an email address as an image or protected through the use of php which can obfuscate the clear text for an email.

Replies:   Vincent Berg  PotomacBob
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

Since that trick has become quite common the spam bots anticipate that and find these with ease.

Alas, my bots aren't quite that smart, as they haven't figured it out yet. So, crossing my fingers, I'll keep using it until they do, as it's also common for the same bots to now use common image-to-text conversion routines. :(

PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

The most reliable way so far is an email address as an image or protected through the use of php which can obfuscate the clear text for an email.

How do you do those?

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

How do you do those?

An image is simple, just create an image with the email address and display that instead of the actual email address. It's a dirty trick but it works... so far.
The PHP way is cleaner. Not sure how it actually works but I have seen it being used on sites. I rarely use PHP and I am not familiar with this specific problem so you should search for it and no doubt something useful will pop up.

Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Keet

I rarely use PHP and I am not familiar with this specific problem so you should search for it and no doubt something useful will pop up.

This page has several: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12592363/looking-for-a-php-only-email-address-obfuscator-function#12592483

My favorite is the Markup + PHP solution (scroll down to the third or fourth answer)

Replies:   Keet
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Michael Loucks

This page has several: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12592363/looking-for-a-php-only-email-address-obfuscator-function#12592483

My favorite is the Markup + PHP solution (scroll down to the third or fourth answer)

I have seen that solution but as stated in one of the replies it's probably countered by the email crawlers by now. I saw 2 other 'solutions' somewhere else on stackoverflow. The first was 'Don't bother, just rely on the spam filters'. The easiest method and will work for most. The other one I liked was 'Invent your own algorithm'. That will work too because it's not one of generally used obfuscating methods. It doesn't have to be complex, just different from the mainstream methods.

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

I have seen that solution but as stated in one of the replies it's probably countered by the email crawlers by now. I saw 2 other 'solutions' somewhere else on stackoverflow. The first was 'Don't bother, just rely on the spam filters'. The easiest method and will work for most. The other one I liked was 'Invent your own algorithm'. That will work too because it's not one of generally used obfuscating methods. It doesn't have to be complex, just different from the mainstream methods.

I've found the harvesting bots to be not too sophisticated (I've done my own testing).

That said, I rely on a combination of RBLs (Postfix simply rejects any mail from a server listed in an RBL), fail2ban (which blacklists, among other things, attempts to send to non-existent users as well as hacking attempts), and SpamAssassin.

Such that I get, perhaps 1 piece of spam in my mailbox per month, and because of whitelisting, my 'false positive' rate is similar - about one per month.

Of course, I run my own server, so I have complete control. :-)

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Michael Loucks

How do you check for false positives?

My ISP introduced e-mail spam-checking by default. By chance I discovered it was occasionally bouncing legitimate e-mails. My ISP's support team tried to stop me switching spam-checking off but eventually relented and told me how to do it. Now I get the occasional flurry with half a dozen spam e-mails in a day (thanks to a research-related blog), but I'm now reasonably confident I'm not missing anything important.

AJ

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

How do you check for false positives?

My ISP introduced e-mail spam-checking by default. By chance I discovered it was occasionally bouncing legitimate e-mails. My ISP's support team tried to stop me switching spam-checking off but eventually relented and told me how to do it. Now I get the occasional flurry with half a dozen spam e-mails in a day (thanks to a research-related blog), but I'm now reasonably confident I'm not missing anything important.

For RBLs, I get a list of to/from addresses emailed to me each day. A quick scan tells me if something was bounced before Spamassassin got to look at it. That happens rarely because of whitelisting.

For Spamassassin it gets sent to a special user mailbox ('spam') which I check on a daily basis. For those rare 'false positives' I bounce it to the appropriate user and add the from address to the whitelist.

I probably spend about five minutes a day, total, checking for false positives. I think the key is whitelisting (e.g. I provide email services for a pastor and his church mailing list, and by adding all the members to the whitelist, we never run into 'false positives'.

Another thing I do is use 'throwaway' email addresses where the mail only goes to a 'catchall' box. If the source of email to that address becomes trusted (over time), I'll redirect it to my main mailbox. If not, I block it. I do this for sites that require you to sign up with an email address (because I refuse to use Facebook and have weaned myself from all Google services).

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Michael Loucks

Such that I get, perhaps 1 piece of spam in my mailbox per month, and because of whitelisting, my 'false positive' rate is similar - about one per month.

Unfortunately, you've got to be cautious, as many honest contacts from your non-regular contacts will never show up, forcing you to dumpster dive through the hundreds of fire-walled Viagra and 'Girls in your area' spam.

My Apple devices no longer even lists the items in my Junk Folder, so I'm not even sure how to check for what's buried in them (hopefully nothing, but who's to know?).

Every now and then, I'll be forced to use a different email while on the road, and my editors simply never see it, because they didn't whitelist the alternate email (which is often the only one Apple allows me to use away from my network due to their new 'secure website' restrictions). :(

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Unfortunately, you've got to be cautious, as many honest contacts from your non-regular contacts will never show up, forcing you to dumpster dive through the hundreds of fire-walled Viagra and 'Girls in your area' spam.

That doesn't happen. The RBLs get rid of most of that even before it hits the spam folder. I have to review no more than perhaps two dozen emails a day.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Keet

An image is simple, just create an image with the email address and display that instead of the actual email address. It's a dirty trick but it works... so far.

Alas, it won't work with most bot-check software, as they 'read' images of characters (as does Google Search Images). However, since so few people write script anymore, and banks have unilaterally given up on requiring them for checks, creating an image of an actual signature (rather than a common 'signature' font) is virtually foolproof, assuming you can still write your name legibly!.

Ross at Play ๐Ÿšซ

@rodav555

That last post by Goldfisherman was meant for you, not me. He has altered his email setting to allow contact now, as far as I can tell.

Goldfisherman ๐Ÿšซ

BTW I pulled up and am reading Nick Scipio's stories so I am familiar with his style. I rang bells and I checked my archives drive and I read them in 2007. A review never hurts.

rodav555 ๐Ÿšซ

Thanks, I just sent an email.

Back to Top

Close
 

WARNING! ADULT CONTENT...

Storiesonline is for adult entertainment only. By accessing this site you declare that you are of legal age and that you agree with our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.


Log In