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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] giving up on email
- Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 11:11:29 +0200
- From: David Santinoli <u235@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] giving up on email
- References: <20040401152941.GZ3770@example.com> <DD5692A6-83F9-11D8-B19F-000A95ABE3E8@example.com> <878yhf2e5d.fsf@example.com> <20040407220921.GC1867@example.com> <87zn9ncasf.fsf@example.com> <20040410093207.GA2448@example.com> <20040410115045.00c9a121.gstewart@example.com>
- Organization: Fastpath Research
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.6i
On Sat, Apr 10, 2004 at 11:50:45AM +0200, Godwin Stewart wrote: > > What we need is a filter which examines the incoming mail, goes > through all the usual deobfuscation hoops automatically and then looks > up where the domain is hosted. If the domain is hosted in China, Korea > or Brazil, or if it no longer resolves, then there's a 99.9999% chance > that the mail containing it was spam. I heard about some piece of software actually performing these checks. However, this strategy seems viable for personal use only - lookups require time, and carefully crafted messages containing tens or hundred of domain names in control of the spammer could DOS a mail server. (Checking the authoritative name servers of the spamvertised domains instead of the hostnames might be a bit more secure.) Anyway, I'd also check Spamhaus and/or SPEWS in addition to the geographical black lists. > Judging by your e-mail address (the TLUG server strips headers) you're > posting from Italy. Correct. > Have the anti-spam laws enacted last year made any perceptible > difference to your spam load? Over here (next door to you in fact in > France) the flow is just as strong - or would be if > it.countries.nerd.dk wasn't in use on my MTA... AFAIK the law you're probably referring to (June 2003) doesn't really feature dramatic spam-specific improvements with respect to its previous incarnation (the 1996 Data Protection Act). The 1996 Act, in turn, did not even mention e-mail; instead, it set up general rules for personal data treatment. Around 2001, people started to realize that, in lack of more appropriate legislation, spammers could be sued for privacy violation; the 1996 Act defined a procedure for reporting such violations to the Data Protection Agency, and possibly get some indemnification. This sort of "lightweight legal suit" soon proved quite effective, as it was resorted to by an ever increasing number of spam victims. (Up to now, I've won 5 out of 5 of these suits, for a grand total of 860 euro.) Recently, these issues have got quite a good media coverage, which IMHO helped spammers to learn their lesson. I receive very, very little Italian spam now (I mean, spam which an Italian merchant would take benefit of) - say 0.5 per month or so. Of course, the abuse of Italian network resources by third parties, and the lack of appropriate reaction by some providers - which I guess is probably the cause of your blacklisting - is an entirely different matter. Cheers David -- David Santinoli, Milano + <david@example.com> Independent Linux/Unix consultant + http://www.santinoli.com
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