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Date:      Wed, 26 Nov 1997 17:41:32 +1030
From:      Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
To:        "Jordan K. Hubbard" <jkh@time.cdrom.com>
Cc:        "Jonathan M. Bresler" <jmb@FreeBSD.ORG>, chat@hub.freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: major push by spammers?
Message-ID:  <19971126174132.22911@lemis.com>
In-Reply-To: <18154.880528164@time.cdrom.com>; from Jordan K. Hubbard on Tue, Nov 25, 1997 at 11:09:24PM -0800
References:  <19971126173214.61195@lemis.com> <18154.880528164@time.cdrom.com>

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On Tue, Nov 25, 1997 at 11:09:24PM -0800, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
>>> Try turning on reverse DNS filtering and you'll find that this number
>>> goes WAAAY up.  According to my stats just for time.cdrom.com, I've
>>> rejected 2203 spam attempts since 9am this morning.  Yep, that's
>>> correct - approximately 2.8 spams rejected every minute.
>>
>> Wow.  You must have annoyed somebody :-)
>
> No, I'm just stupid enough to post to USENET using my real mailing
> address. :-)

Isn't that the same thing?

>> How are you recognizing the spammers?
>
> 2 ways: The first, if reverse DNS lookup fails, accounts for about 90%
> of the rejects.  When I first started doing this, I worried that
> perhaps I was rejecting some legit emails so for the first couple of
> weeks I'd do one day on, one day off.  In 14 days worth of testing, I
> got one "legitimate" message (though it was unanswerable due to said
> misconfiguration, so I could have done without it :) and many many
> hundreds of spams on the days that I had reverse DNS checking
> disabled.  Needless to say, I can't even imagine not having it on now.
>
> The second way, which accounts for that last 10%, is to reject
> according to a ban list which is maintained by the folks at gulf.net
> (to which we add our own local banlist).

Hmmm.  If I ever get this book finished, I suppose I should take a
look at this.

Greg




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