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Date:      Tue, 26 May 1998 01:16:06 -0600
From:      Blaine Minazzi <bminazzi@w3page.com>
To:        Greg Stringfellow <greg@prismnet.com>
Cc:        isp@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: SMTP Relay probing - Should I follow up - advice?
Message-ID:  <356A6C36.25C841B5@w3page.com>
References:  <001f01bd886a$6a17d6a0$0285c6d1@darkstar.prismnet.com>

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Greg Stringfellow wrote:
> 
> Blaine,
> I do believe you want to take your frustrations out on the wrong people. Not
> all of UUNETs customers are "fu*&ing  bandwidth thieves and miscreants". So
> why should we punish them?

Now where in the hell did I say anything about _ALL_ uunets customers
are bandwidth theives?

First off, what I said was in reference to ALTER.NET.  

I said:  ``Oh, I see... You CHOOSE to do business with companies that
support these fu*&ing  bandwidth thieves and miscreants....''     I did
not say that Shaun was a bandwidth theif, but only that he chose to do
business with a company that allows this kind of horse shit behavior.

It is the spammers, that I called fu*&king bandwidth theives.  The
original subject is realying spam off of mail servers without
permission.  That is theft of services, plain and simple.  I have sent
numerous complaints to ALTER.NET, and have never seen an account
cancelled, or any other action to show that ALTER.NET give a flying fox
about anything other than $$$$.  They are no better than AGIS used to be
when they were the home for Spamford Wallace and the like.

> Another way of looking at it is this, it looks like the account your
> emailing from goes through a major backbone. Do you think they don't house a
> few spammers? Should we all prevent you from emailing everyone else because
> of it? Think about how smart that is.

There appears to be a HUGE difference between SPRINT and ALTER.NET.  I
would have no beef with ALTER.NET if they enforced an anti-spam AUP
against these kinds of users. Nothing can stop the occaional spammer,
but ALTER.NET seems downright spam friendly.  Maybe it's just appears
that way, but a very large percentage of traceroute's I have done to
spammers goes back to ALTER.NET.  Complaints to ALTER.NET seem to
generate no action, or have any account cancelled.
That, plus others observations along the same lines leads me to believe
that they are the new AGIS.

The backbone our servers use has a AUP that prohibits spamming. They
have, and will, cancel accounts of these kinds of theives.   My "dial
up" from home, also uses sprint.  They have even gone do far as to not
allow the use of ANY relay other than their own SMTP server for outbound
mail for their dial up customers.  So, people who use dial up from
sprint's service cannot conceal their identity easily.  There is even an
X-Complaints line added to the mail header.  I would call that fairly
responsible of them.  At least they are trying to stop the crap, unlike
ALTER.NET.  

If ALTER.NET customers were denied services on a fairly widespread
basis, how long do you think they would tolerate spammers?   

> I agree we should do something. But I think we all need to step back and
> take a look at how we approach it.
> 
> I guess I could take this conversation further but I don't believe it
> relates to FreeBSD or how FreeBSD relates to an ISP.
> 
> Greg

Putting pressure on the wallet is usually a fairly effective tactic.  Do
you think that AGIS had some sort of religious conversion?  I doubt it. 
I think the pressure of the internet community as a whole, and the
outright hassle they went through because of their spam policies caused
them to make a decision based on economic realities that hosting these
assholes was downright bad for business.

If you have ever had your server used as a relay, ( I have ) then you
CLEARLY understand how this relates to ISP's. And since this is about
the only ISP list many of us subscribe to, here is where it gets aired.

I have the Anti Relay, ( pop before sendmail realay ), the RBL patches,
the patches to stop incoming mail from "fake" domains, etc. all
installed.   The amount of time that sys admins all across the country
have to spend to try and stop spam, and then clean up the messes these
theives leave behind amounts to millions of dollars a year in lost
productivity, and in some cases, they effectivily caused a Denial of
Service for providers, with thousands in lost revenue, and a potential
black mark on your name.  Not exactly a trivial issue for ISP's, running
FreeBSD or not.

Of course, if we hold the thread to explicit FreeBSD _AND_ ISP issues
only, then about 80% of the messages on this list would never get
posted.


Regards,

Blaine

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