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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: Cisco 2611 as a firewall?
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: Cisco 2611 as a firewall?
- From: "Thomas O'Dowd" <tom@example.com>
- Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 20:04:19 +0900
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- In-Reply-To: <20010517191942.F28296@example.com>; from jq@example.com on Thu, May 17, 2001 at 07:19:42PM +0900
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On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 07:19:42PM +0900, Jonathan Q wrote: > Thomas O'Dowd (tom@example.com) wrote: > > > Why filter outgoing 25? Presumably you are trying to stop customers > > who are potential spammers from directly sending email avoiding > > your mail servers and filters. If my ISP blocked any outgoing ports > > I'd move on... I consider it basic privacy and usually throw in PGP > > You realize, of course, that the only mailservers you can connect to > on port 25 outside of your ISPs network are improperly configured > ones (yes, pop-before-smtp counts as improper configuration; it's > a total kludge and we have seen it defeated by spammers), so you > are in essence arguing in favor of open relays, at least to > some extent. Fair enough, some people think open relays are > perfectly fine; I'm just kind of surprised to see it from you. > You seem to be a fairly anti-spam kind of guy. Hmmm. Actually, I like to run my own mailserver on my home machine and let that do all the work for me. I'm not talking about relaying just connecting point to point. Its a pretty valid thing to do I would say and I would have thought quite normal in the community of linux users... For the record, I would consider myself as spam hating as the next person out there who has had email for a couple of years now. Don't see why I should be forced to pop before smtp if I've a mail I wanna send right away and one of my mates has gone and sent me some silly mpeg that eats my traffic for the next 30 minutes while I sit there helpless. > Any argument that anyone could ever have made for allowing > outbound port 25 from a dial pool has been taken away by the > current widespread support for auth smtp. Does my argument not count? > You'll find it more and more difficult to get an ISP that doesn't > filter outbound port 25 on their dial-up pools; many of us do it and > more get onboard all the time. Sad world :( > > for good measure. Why not have a good policy against spammers instead > > and terminate them on valid claims of spam with some extra fines > > thrown in for good measure. Freedom.. > > Because that only works after the fact (which means that it > doesn't work at all; it's kind of like having a law against > burglary but leaving your door unlocked; your stuff gets > stolen and probably never recovered, and all you can do is try to > prosecute the burglar after the fact); the spammer gets a freebie, > no matter what. And that's all they want. Spammers tend not > to use the same account for more than one or two runs, because > it gets terminated as soon as they're found out (well, not everywhere; > seem pretty soft on spam). Secondly, it's very difficult to collect > those fines. If you tell the spammer "We're billing you for $500 > for excessive use of system resources, cleanup, and damage control" and > they tell you where to shove it (which they will), you'll spend > more than that trying to get the $500 from them, and there's no > guarantee of success. Yeah, I thought that the fines are hard to get out of them :( Wouldn't some sort of ban list between ISPs work? I mean, the spammer lives somewhere, they register with you, you have their information, as in they're address, telephone number, etc. Surely, they do it once within a telephone area, account terminated and put on a shared ban list with other ISPs. If they want reconnection then they have to dialup outside their area or steal someone elses account. Hmmm, all possible too I guess. But still, I ain't a fan of filtering. > You sound like a person who has never worked at an ISP. You ought > to try it some time. It may convert you to port 25 filtering quickly. :) Nope, never worked for an ISP. I'd say most people sound that way though... > We've been doing it for about two years now, and it's pretty effective. > The few spammers we've had have been forced to go through our SMTPs > and as a result were even caught in the act in several cases and > terminated while they were still sending. And yes, it's lots of > fun to log into the RAS, cut off the spammer, see them dial in again, > cut them off again, see them dial again, cut them off again, until > the update to their account status goes into effect and they get > brushed off by the RAS :-) Sounds evil *grin* Tom. -- Thomas O'Dowd. - Nooping - http://nooper.com tom@example.com - Testing - http://nooper.co.jp/labs
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- Re: Cisco 2611 as a firewall?
- From: Jonathan Q <jq@example.com>
- Re: Cisco 2611 as a firewall?
- From: "Thomas O'Dowd" <tom@example.com>
- Re: Cisco 2611 as a firewall?
- From: Jonathan Q <jq@example.com>
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