Can anyone explain the following? When a node has both a Bitnet and an Internet address, there seem to be three ways that the address is registered when someone sends in a subscription: xxxxx@yyyyyy (bitnet) [log in to unmask] (internet) [log in to unmask] (in the case of our list) Under what conditions does it get registered which way? I know that one factor is whether the person sent in the subscription request via the bitnet address (LISTSERV@CUNYVM) or internet address ([log in to unmask]). The reason I am asking this now, is a subscriber wrote saying that no matter WHICH address she tried, she was told that she was "not authorized." Her subscription bears the following address: [log in to unmask] When she submitted her help request to our TESLHELP help line, however, this address appeared in the header, but the bitnet style address appeared in the body of the message!! It would thus appear that theaddress matching her registered address was actually available to the LISTSERV, but it was looking somewhere else and picked up a different version of the address and then rejected her. ====================================================================== From: Judy Reeves <[log in to unmask]> Subject: NOT AUTHORIZED? To: [log in to unmask] This message was originally submitted by F11C024@SAKSU00 to the TESLHELP list at CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU. If you simply forward it back to the list, using a mail [rest deleted] ====================================================================== How can this be prevented? If I delete her subscriptions and then have her resubscribe, I'm afraid that she will again be registered with the '%' style and then be rejected when she sends in a subsequent command to the LISTSERV. Cheers, --Tom Robb, Owner TESLHELP, TESLJB-L, TESLEJ-L /Thomas N. Robb, Ph.D. [log in to unmask]\ < Prof, Fac. of For'n Languages [log in to unmask] > \Kyoto Sangyo University +81-720-44-7303 (Fax)/