Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-13 Thread Christopher Chan
On Thursday, August 11, 2011 11:28 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:

 That conversation would make sense if there were any spam blockers that
 cared about the collateral damage to unrelated hosts that happen to be

 So, in your experience, there aren't *any*, they all block an entire range?

 If so, why is that a valid method for blocking spam?

 I haven't done extensive research, but there's not really a good way to
 do it at all, much less correctly.

Man, this is getting to sound more and more like SPAM-L. Outblaze Ltd, 
before they sold their message business to IBM, did the right thing. 
Where net blocks are proven to be entirely spew engines, the whole net 
block gets blocked, persistent abusive ones get firewalled. Said net 
block would be released a year later for review in case it had been 
reassigned.

Single mail servers with spammy domains and clean ones get 'whitelisted' 
in that the ip is not stuffed in the block rules but the domains are.



 in an IP range that they don't like.  I don't think you'll find any.
 And it has always been that way since the start of those businesses.

 Yes, 15 years ago. I reiterate: it has been *completely* wrong for about
 10 years.

 It was always wrong.  That doesn't mean it won't happen.


Whether it is wrong depends on the black list maintainer imho. Some 
black lists are very clear in their criteria. Whole country. eg: China. 
Don't like that? Don't use it. That's what you want? Good for you.

When a black list starts doing things inconsistently, then maybe you can 
label them wrong. Maybe the Centos mail admins might want to take 
another look into manitu.net...
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-12 Thread Lamar Owen
On Thursday, August 11, 2011 05:31:21 PM Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 *You* confused things. You mixed ISPs and hosting. You can't. 

An Internet Service Provider is an Internet Service Provider regardless of the 
type, bandwidth, or technology of the pipe provided, regardless of the number 
of IP addresses, and regardless of whether the hosts on their networks are 
primarily eyeballs (typical consumer at the end of a DSL, cable, or other 
dynamically assigned single IP address (in IPv4) connection) or content 
providers.  A hosting provider will have its own ISP; our ISP's here do both 
hosting and eyeballs.  Yeah, a single ISP can have co-lo cages, large transit 
and peering customers with multiple /24's each, as well as a consumer-grade 
dynamically-provisioned single-IP-per-customer eyeball net.

No ISP is entirely an eyeball network (in NANOG list terminology).

But this thread is getting entirely out of hand.
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-12 Thread Craig White
On Fri, 2011-08-12 at 13:41 -0400, Lamar Owen wrote:
 On Thursday, August 11, 2011 05:31:21 PM Kai Schaetzl wrote:
  *You* confused things. You mixed ISPs and hosting. You can't. 
 
 An Internet Service Provider is an Internet Service Provider regardless of 
 the type, bandwidth, or technology of the pipe provided, regardless of the 
 number of IP addresses, and regardless of whether the hosts on their networks 
 are primarily eyeballs (typical consumer at the end of a DSL, cable, or other 
 dynamically assigned single IP address (in IPv4) connection) or content 
 providers.  A hosting provider will have its own ISP; our ISP's here do both 
 hosting and eyeballs.  Yeah, a single ISP can have co-lo cages, large transit 
 and peering customers with multiple /24's each, as well as a consumer-grade 
 dynamically-provisioned single-IP-per-customer eyeball net.
 
 No ISP is entirely an eyeball network (in NANOG list terminology).
 
 But this thread is getting entirely out of hand.

considering that it began as a rant which was inappropriately targeted,
I would say that it was out of hand when it began.

Craig


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-12 Thread Always Learning

On Fri, 2011-08-12 at 19:13 -0700, Craig White wrote:

 considering that it began as a rant which was inappropriately targeted,
 I would say that it was out of hand when it began.

Lets not prolong it then ;-)


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread mark
Paul,

Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 17:10 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 
 listadmin,

Can you PLEASE, PLEASE find *any* other blacklist than manitu? This
 asshole's method was ok a dozen years ago; these days, with hosting sites
 hosting tens or hundreds of thousands of domains, with too many running
 Windows, and so infected and sending out spam. They then send all mail via
 one mailhost, with the result that those of us with *no* spam coming out
 are frequently blocked.

 This ain't the first time for me with this jerk, either. A few years
 ago, Cogeco in Canada was using him, and on and off for *months* I was
 blocked from exchanging email with an old friend... because I was
 mailing from Roadrunner in Chicago (hosting hundreds of thousands of
 households), until my friend dropped Cogeco.
snip
 Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)

Because I'm not going to pay for colocation, or whatever. This is my 
personal domain, etc, and I'm paying about $6US for it a month. I'm not 
running a business, and so don't want to pay $$$ to Verizon for a 
business line.
snip
 
 Spam is a USA invention created by someone called Wallace? about 15?
 years ago. It is now a world-wide pest.

Ah, yes. I think you're thinking of the Green Card Scam, from Cantor and 
Siegal. Yes, I was on usenet then There's no such thing as 
community, this is just a marketing opportunity.

mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread mark
Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 Waste of time and resources.  Learn how to properly handle email and
 none of this nonsense is necessary.
 
 Properly handling emails means, to me, not being too reliant on others
 whose faults and omissions could impair your ability to send and receive
 mail . and not being a willing victim of spam ;-)

You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has 
literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for 
all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their 
heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and 
blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though 
none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming

marmk

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Always Learning

Hi Mark,

 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has 
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for 
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their 
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and 
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though 
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming

Its the same old one size fits all syndrome.

What I was suggesting, is can't you have a back-up plan. For example:-

(1) run your own mail server ?

(2) use something like Google which will automatically forward by SMTP
and allow POP3 collection ?

Obviously I don't know your computer situation. It seems your present
'service' is not always reliable, so is there anything we can do to help
you devise an alternative plan ?



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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Always Learning

Hi Mark,

  Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)

 Because I'm not going to pay for colocation, or whatever. This is my 
 personal domain, etc, and I'm paying about $6US for it a month. I'm not 
 running a business, and so don't want to pay $$$ to Verizon for a 
 business line.

My domains cost about USD 7.50 annually. Couldn't you get a VPS for
little more than your USD 6 a month, or does that include your DSL
connection ?

Do you get mail by SMTP ?

 Ah, yes. I think you're thinking of the Green Card Scam, from Cantor and 
 Siegal. Yes, I was on usenet then There's no such thing as 
 community, this is just a marketing opportunity.


Used to be on flame-wars then :-)  And an ardent critic of the NRA gun
nutters.


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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Always Learning wrote:

 Hi Mark,

 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming

 Its the same old one size fits all syndrome.

 What I was suggesting, is can't you have a back-up plan. For example:-

 (1) run your own mail server ?

 (2) use something like Google which will automatically forward by SMTP
 and allow POP3 collection ?

 Obviously I don't know your computer situation. It seems your present
 'service' is not always reliable, so is there anything we can do to help
 you devise an alternative plan ?

No, you still don't understand.
1. I'm not going to join this list, or any other, from multiple email
accounts
2. I do not want to use my current 'Net provider (that provides access to
my home), because I've relocated too many times, and want one, utterly
stable email address that's under my control. That's why I pay for
hosting. My home 'Net access is through my local phone company. In the US,
you have to pay significantly extra for a business line, which would *not*
block my own mailserver.
3. 5-cent.us is my own domain. I'm paying a hosting provider (somewhere in
the west of the US), because another techie mailing list I'm on
recommended them as being a) reliable, and b) inexpensive.

Finally, you're missing the real issue: not how I can use different email
addresses, or run my own mailserver, but that I was hoping to have a
conversation with the CentOS mailing list admin about using *anyone* else
than manitu.net to block spam to the list. I mentioned the problems I had
a few years back emailing to a friend in Canada through his then-local
'Net provider, because they were also using manitu.net.

The real problem is manitou.net, and their algorythm. 15 years ago, it
might have been reasonable to track mailhosts, and block all mail coming
from that host. For the last 10 years, at least, it's *wrong*. Even the
best of 'Net providers can't keep up with all the spammers (or don't have
what I would consider reasonable policies in place). With the exception of
a few outlaw sites, mostly, I believe, in eastern Europe or Asia, most
ISPs *try*... but with all the mergers 10 years ago, most ISPs are *huge*.
Roadrunner, that I mentioned, is a US national provider that does cable,
VOIP, and 'Net in *many* cities around the US. I, personally, used them in
Chicago and central Florida. I *think* they're part of Time-Warner. They
are the ISP for millions of people, and tens or hundreds of thousands in
each area, just as my hosting provider, Bluehost, hosts tens (or is it
hundreds?) of *thousands* of domains. Some of those domains are running on
*bleah* Windows (not Linux, as I am), and are clearly infected.

For manitu.net to decide that *everyone* coming from that mailhost,
regardless of the source domain, is incompetence and hostile to the way
things are for years now. They are doing a *very* bad job, and have
companies convinced that since they've been doing it for years, they
should stay with them. I want the CentOS list maintainer to reconsider.

I might also note that months ago - last year? - one or more other folks
on this list had the same problem, for the same reason. It's manitu.net
that's the problem, not my hosting provider.

mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Kai Schaetzl
we block with manitu = nixspam as our primary RBL (followed by Spamhaus). 
Results are excellent. Their blocking is very reasonable. It's also 
possible to ask for inclusion in the whitelist. Obviously your great ISP 
Roadrunner isn't interested in inclusion or is sending out so many spam 
that they won't include it. Ask Roadrunner.
Actually, Roadrunner has been known for years for big spam amounts 
originating from their network. I set it independently on our ACL for all 
mail servers years ago (not their whole IP range but all hosts matching 
their internet access assignment scheme).
So, what you ask for is supporting one of the biggest spam output 
machinaries (besides Chinese ISPs) on the net. Thanks, no.

 Because I'm not going to pay for colocation, or whatever.

Well, you are sending via monsterhost.com/bluehost.com which doesn't seem 
to belong to Roadrunner. So, what's your problem?


Kai


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Always Learning

On Thu, 2011-08-11 at 09:09 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 The real problem is manitou.net, and their algorythm. 15 years ago, it
 might have been reasonable to track mailhosts, and block all mail coming
 from that host. For the last 10 years, at least, it's *wrong*. Even the
 best of 'Net providers can't keep up with all the spammers (or don't have
 what I would consider reasonable policies in place). With the exception of
 a few outlaw sites, mostly, I believe, in eastern Europe or Asia, most
 ISPs *try*... but with all the mergers 10 years ago, most ISPs are *huge*.
 Roadrunner, that I mentioned, is a US national provider that does cable,
 VOIP, and 'Net in *many* cities around the US. I, personally, used them in
 Chicago and central Florida. I *think* they're part of Time-Warner. They
 are the ISP for millions of people, and tens or hundreds of thousands in
 each area, just as my hosting provider, Bluehost, hosts tens (or is it
 hundreds?) of *thousands* of domains. Some of those domains are running on
 *bleah* Windows (not Linux, as I am), and are clearly infected.
 
 For manitu.net to decide that *everyone* coming from that mailhost,
 regardless of the source domain, is incompetence and hostile to the way
 things are for years now. They are doing a *very* bad job, and have
 companies convinced that since they've been doing it for years, they
 should stay with them. I want the CentOS list maintainer to reconsider.

ISP amalgation in the western world is a fact of life. 

Who do you, and others, suggest as a 'fit for purpose' alternative to
manitu.net ?




-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Always Learning

On Thu, 2011-08-11 at 06:52 +0100, Keith Roberts wrote:

 On Thu, 11 Aug 2011, Always Learning wrote:
 
  Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)
  on several servers. I refuse incoming mails where the sender's HELO /
  EHLO does not match the sender's IP host name, because that - for me -
  eliminates 90% or more of spam and I absolutely detest spam.
 
  No Centos fan should have to depend on other's email services for daily
  communications, so do consider operating your own mail server.

 I have been wondering about that myself.
 
 I'm using postfix instead of sendmail:
 
 postfix 0:off   1:off   2:on3:on4:on5:on 
 6:off
 ...
 sendmail0:off   1:off   2:off   3:off   4:off 
 5:off   6:off

I did:-

yum install exim
yum erase (or was it remove?) sendmail

 Can I use postfix to send outgoing emails directly from my 
 machine, without opening any external ports? Or is that 
 required for the server handshake protocol?

Never used postfix. For mail I use Evolution 2.12.3 (2.12.3-19.el5). If
I want to route outgoing mail by the Exim on the machine I'm using I
just quote the mail server's host name (example. m4.u226.com). Obviously
the Exim, or in your instance Postfix, needs to be configured to accept
locally originating mail

My Exim examples:-

daemon_smtp_ports  = 25 : 55525
local_interfaces   = 127.0.0.1 : 10.123.123.42 (the IP address of the
machine)

 Only problem with that was their mail server needed a 
 password to connect to the server, and alpine is currently 
 compiled without that option. So I had to enter the password 
 whenever I wanted to send an email.

Running your own mail server(s) generally means you simply send direct
and your emails are not delayed by problems at your ISP.


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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 we block with manitu = nixspam as our primary RBL (followed by Spamhaus).
 Results are excellent. Their blocking is very reasonable. It's also
 possible to ask for inclusion in the whitelist. Obviously your great ISP
 Roadrunner isn't interested in inclusion or is sending out so many spam
 that they won't include it. Ask Roadrunner.

I'm sorry, nobody seems to get what I've been saying: I haven't been on
roadrunner for two years. I'm sending this email via bluehost, my current
hosting provider. Also, with these giant ISP/hosting services, trying to
get them to do something for me, that's one vs. MegaGiantCo, w/ layers
upon layers of managers and policy, is nearly impossible.

I can try emailing Bluehost, but...

 Actually, Roadrunner has been known for years for big spam amounts
 originating from their network. I set it independently on our ACL for all
 mail servers years ago (not their whole IP range but all hosts matching
 their internet access assignment scheme).

AND THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE between you and manitu.net. You're not going for
their whole IP range, which seems to be what manitu is doing.

 So, what you ask for is supporting one of the biggest spam output
 machinaries (besides Chinese ISPs) on the net. Thanks, no.

Well, except that means that a lot of people are in the boat the way I
would have been, had I been on this list two years ago. My choice, where I
was living in Chicago, for 'Net access was a) Comcast (*GAG*), ATT, or
roadrunner. Great choice... and rr was the best, most reliable, and
cheapest.

 Because I'm not going to pay for colocation, or whatever.

 Well, you are sending via monsterhost.com/bluehost.com which doesn't seem
 to belong to Roadrunner. So, what's your problem?

Again, I haven't been with rr for two years. My current hosting provider,
Bluehosts, is is telling me that I was banned.

Also, again, it isn't just me. What was it, earlier this year? late last
year? one or two other folks were complaining, when they could *finally*
post again, that they'd been banned.

mark
mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 8:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Obviously I don't know your computer situation. It seems your present
 'service' is not always reliable, so is there anything we can do to help
 you devise an alternative plan ?

 No, you still don't understand.

How much sympathy do you expect for self-inflicted pain?

 1. I'm not going to join this list, or any other, from multiple email
 accounts

So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.  If you don't 
like their browser interface, use pop/imap and authenticated smtp. 
Plus, you can set it up so they archive a copy when you download so you 
can delete your instance and still be able to log into their web 
interface and find it in a search if you want to review it later.  If 
you like using your own mail host, use fetchmail to move it for you.

 Finally, you're missing the real issue: not how I can use different email
 addresses, or run my own mailserver, but that I was hoping to have a
 conversation with the CentOS mailing list admin about using *anyone* else
 than manitu.net to block spam to the list. I mentioned the problems I had
 a few years back emailing to a friend in Canada through his then-local
 'Net provider, because they were also using manitu.net.

That conversation would make sense if there were any spam blockers that 
cared about the collateral damage to unrelated hosts that happen to be 
in an IP range that they don't like.  I don't think you'll find any. 
And it has always been that way since the start of those businesses.

 For manitu.net to decide that *everyone* coming from that mailhost,
 regardless of the source domain, is incompetence and hostile to the way
 things are for years now.

Good luck with that...  I think you'll find it easier to send though 
some service that accepts authenticated smtp and fights that battle for 
you than to do it yourself.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Scott Robbins
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 09:52:47AM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 8/11/2011 8:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 
 
 So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.  




If you don't 
 like their browser interface, use pop/imap and authenticated smtp. 


Did gmail ever fix their feature that if you send an email to a
mailing list, you don't receive a copy?


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hungry and horny?
Buffy: Well... sometimes I crave a nonfat yogurt afterwards.
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 8/11/2011 8:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
snip
 1. I'm not going to join this list, or any other, from multiple email
 accounts

 So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.  If you don't

No. Not ever. I have no intention of using a service that will have
*years*, at least, of backups of all my mail, including stuff that was
hypothetically d/l and *deleted*.

 Finally, you're missing the real issue: not how I can use different
 email addresses, or run my own mailserver, but that I was hoping to
 have a conversation with the CentOS mailing list admin about using
 *anyone* else than manitu.net to block spam to the list. I mentioned
 the problems I had a few years back emailing to a friend in Canada
 through his then-local 'Net provider, because they were also using
 manitu.net.

 That conversation would make sense if there were any spam blockers that
 cared about the collateral damage to unrelated hosts that happen to be

So, in your experience, there aren't *any*, they all block an entire range?

If so, why is that a valid method for blocking spam?

 in an IP range that they don't like.  I don't think you'll find any.
 And it has always been that way since the start of those businesses.

Yes, 15 years ago. I reiterate: it has been *completely* wrong for about
10 years.
snip
 Good luck with that...  I think you'll find it easier to send though
 some service that accepts authenticated smtp and fights that battle for
 you than to do it yourself.

Um, my email does.

  mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 9:58 AM, Scott Robbins wrote:
 On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 09:52:47AM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 8/11/2011 8:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:


 So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.




 If you don't
 like their browser interface, use pop/imap and authenticated smtp.


 Did gmail ever fix their feature that if you send an email to a
 mailing list, you don't receive a copy?

It is still like that at least through the web interface - not sure 
about through smtp.  I actually use fetchmail to pull to my own imap 
host (set up before gmail did imap) and send through my own server 
except from my phone.  I'll probably revisit the setup one of these days 
because I need a vpn to reach my own smtp host.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread William Hooper
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 11:02 AM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 8/11/2011 8:09 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 snip
 1. I'm not going to join this list, or any other, from multiple email
 accounts

 So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.  If you don't

 No. Not ever. I have no intention of using a service that will have
 *years*, at least, of backups of all my mail, including stuff that was
 hypothetically d/l and *deleted*.

The CentOS list is publicly archived.  Who cares if Google keeps an extra copy?

-- 
William Hooper
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 10:02 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 So move them to gmail.  Price is right. End of problem.  If you don't

 No. Not ever. I have no intention of using a service that will have
 *years*, at least, of backups of all my mail, including stuff that was
 hypothetically d/l and *deleted*.

Wait, do you think you can send something anywhere on the internet 
without it being monitored and potentially recorded?  What country is 
this?  If you are concerned about who will see something, don't put it 
anywhere on the internet.  My mail is boring enough that no one else 
would bother reading it anyway.

 That conversation would make sense if there were any spam blockers that
 cared about the collateral damage to unrelated hosts that happen to be

 So, in your experience, there aren't *any*, they all block an entire range?

 If so, why is that a valid method for blocking spam?

I haven't done extensive research, but there's not really a good way to 
do it at all, much less correctly.

 in an IP range that they don't like.  I don't think you'll find any.
 And it has always been that way since the start of those businesses.

 Yes, 15 years ago. I reiterate: it has been *completely* wrong for about
 10 years.

It was always wrong.  That doesn't mean it won't happen.

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Craig White

On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:

 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 Waste of time and resources.  Learn how to properly handle email and
 none of this nonsense is necessary.
 
 Properly handling emails means, to me, not being too reliant on others
 whose faults and omissions could impair your ability to send and receive
 mail . and not being a willing victim of spam ;-)
 
 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has 
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for 
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their 
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and 
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though 
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming

Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.

If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers as a 
source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP servers to 
satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.

Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it blocks 
EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to do since 
they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at all... only SMTP 
servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP Addresses.

Craig

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Craig White wrote:

 On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:

 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 Waste of time and resources.  Learn how to properly handle email and
 none of this nonsense is necessary.

 Properly handling emails means, to me, not being too reliant on others
 whose faults and omissions could impair your ability to send and
 receive
 mail . and not being a willing victim of spam ;-)

 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming
 
 Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.

 If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers
 as a source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP
 servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.

 Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to
 do since they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at
 all... only SMTP servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP
 Addresses.

 Craig

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Sorry, mouse ran away there with the last post with no comments.

Craig White wrote:
 On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:
 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
snip
 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming
 
 Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.

 If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers
 as a source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP
 servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.

 Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to
 do since they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at
 all... only SMTP servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP
 Addresses.

And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno where
you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your home:
call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu, and to
request that manitu put them on a whitelist.

Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
around the time when you move and change providers.

   mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Josh Miller
On 08/11/2011 10:56 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Craig White wrote:
 On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:
 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 snip
 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming
 
 Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.

 If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers
 as a source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP
 servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.

 Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to
 do since they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at
 all... only SMTP servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP
 Addresses.

 And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno where
 you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your home:
 call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu, and to
 request that manitu put them on a whitelist.

 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

In fact, that is one of the single most effective mechanisms used to 
combat spam, in my experience and will cut down the amount accepted at 
the gateway(s) by up to 95%.

(I know a lot of folks on this list will maintain their own mail server 
and might get a few hundred or thousand messages each day going through 
but I've run systems with up to billions of messages a day which is a 
completely different ball game.)

-- 
Josh Miller
Open Source Solutions Architect
http://itsecureadmin.com/
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Josh Miller wrote:
 On 08/11/2011 10:56 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Craig White wrote:
 On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:
 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 snip
 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled
 for all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming
 
 Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.

 If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP
 servers as a source for spam then the solution lies with those
 that own the SMTP
 servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.

 Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed
snip
 And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno
 where you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your
 home: call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu,
 and to request that manitu put them on a whitelist.

 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

 In fact, that is one of the single most effective mechanisms used to
 combat spam, in my experience and will cut down the amount accepted at
 the gateway(s) by up to 95%.

I'm not sure who you're answering or agreeing with, but my point is still
that 90% of everybody blocked has no clue whatever about what to do about
it, and esp. the people with infected systems. A standard channel *to* an
ISP for this kind of technical issue - either the ISP notifying the
spammer that their machine needs to be cleaned before they'll be allowed
back online, or between ISP, would do something useful. But I doubt very
much that most of those 90% of users who are *not* spammers, nor infected,
would have any idea to complain to their ISP that something needed to be
done, and so the ISP goes on thinking there's no problem. The result that
*I* see from that is that people simply drop, or change services, and
nothing gets fixed.
snip
 mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Always Learning

On Thu, 2011-08-11 at 13:56 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Craig White wrote:

  If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers
  as a source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP
  servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.
 
  Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
  blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to
  do since they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at
  all... only SMTP servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP
  Addresses.

 And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno where
 you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your home:
 call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu, and to
 request that manitu put them on a whitelist.
 
 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

You can not change the world on your own, even a little bit, without
some help. Help from mass 'Internet connections' ISP staff is often
dependent on not very intelligent people being able to understand your
problem and then having the ability to forward-on your concerns to a
more skilled person.

Your task can be onerous and arduous and it will consume your ever
decreasing free-time.

Be pragmatic. Accept partial defeat. Get an alternative email
arrangement and you may become more happier.

Incidentally as you run your own mail via Bluehost are you actually
affected, at the moment, by manitu because, presumably, you can send-out
by BH ?



-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Josh Miller
On 08/11/2011 11:12 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Josh Miller wrote:
 In fact, that is one of the single most effective mechanisms used to
 combat spam, in my experience and will cut down the amount accepted at
 the gateway(s) by up to 95%.

 I'm not sure who you're answering or agreeing with, but my point is still
 that 90% of everybody blocked has no clue whatever about what to do about
 it, and esp. the people with infected systems. A standard channel *to* an
 ISP for this kind of technical issue - either the ISP notifying the
 spammer that their machine needs to be cleaned before they'll be allowed
 back online, or between ISP, would do something useful. But I doubt very
 much that most of those 90% of users who are *not* spammers, nor infected,
 would have any idea to complain to their ISP that something needed to be
 done, and so the ISP goes on thinking there's no problem. The result that
 *I* see from that is that people simply drop, or change services, and
 nothing gets fixed.
 snip

Mark,

I totally understand your viewpoint.  I have been that guy on the phone 
with Comcast demanding that port 25 be un-blocked so that I could 
continue hosting email from my home ISP as part of my service agreement 
included the ability to check/send/receive email on-line (that only 
worked 2-3 times).

The problem is that most home users don't host mail and don't care to. 
Along with that attitude is the fact that a significant amount of spam 
comes from IP addresses that are dynamically assigned or assigned by 
residential serving ISPs.  It's much easier to block those IP ranges 
than to care that someone might be sending a few messages out of one of 
them from a reputable domain.

Also, where I'm from (greater Seattle area even), you don't have much 
choice as far as ISPs go, so changing service providers is not a big option.

-- 
Josh Miller
Open Source Solutions Architect
http://itsecureadmin.com/
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Always Learning wrote:
 On Thu, 2011-08-11 at 13:56 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Craig White wrote:

 And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno
 where you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your
 home: call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu,
 and to request that manitu put them on a whitelist.

 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

 You can not change the world on your own, even a little bit, without
 some help. Help from mass 'Internet connections' ISP staff is often
 dependent on not very intelligent people being able to understand your
 problem and then having the ability to forward-on your concerns to a
 more skilled person.

That's people who are deeply trained to ask, as the first question, and
not think to the second sentence, until you answer what is your operating
system?, or maybe have you turned on your computer, or have you
rebooted your computer, and the idea that the problem is on *their* end
is out of the room.

Try getting one of them to ping your cable modem when the *ethernet* port
burns out, but the coax port is fine. Last time I had to, it took about 10
min before she went to talk to her manager

 Your task can be onerous and arduous and it will consume your ever
 decreasing free-time.

 Be pragmatic. Accept partial defeat. Get an alternative email
 arrangement and you may become more happier.

NO. I WILL *NOT* allow the goddamned spammers to block me from the 'Net,
and I'm *not* willing to have them cost me my email, and go to somewhere
else; certainly not to someone's suggestion of yahoo (and they aren't
banned by manitu?)

 Incidentally as you run your own mail via Bluehost are you actually
 affected, at the moment, by manitu because, presumably, you can send-out
 by BH ?

You misunderstand: I pay them for hosting. They provide the mailserver; it
just comes from my domain on my virtual host on their servers. I don't run
a business, so I'm not going to pay a *lot* more than $6US/mo to run my
own mailserver

 mark


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Craig White

On Aug 11, 2011, at 10:56 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Sorry, mouse ran away there with the last post with no comments.
 
 Craig White wrote:
 On Aug 11, 2011, at 4:51 AM, mark wrote:
 Always Learning wrote:
 On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 snip
 You don't seem to understand the issue. My hosting provider has
 literally hundreds of thousands of domains. The email gets funneled for
 all, I assume, except those paying for co-location, through their
 heavy-duty mailhost. manitu sees spam coming from that mailhost, and
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN that goes through it, even though
 none of the rest of us are running windows or spamming
 
 Not sure who it is that doesn't understand the issues.
 
 If an RBL has designated a particular SMTP server or range of SMTP servers
 as a source for spam then the solution lies with those that own the SMTP
 servers to satisfy the RBL and get the blocks removed.
 
 Yes, some RBL's are more aggressive than others but the notion that it
 blocks EVERY EMAIL FROM EVERY DOMAIN is exactly what RBL's are supposed to
 do since they don't worry at all about which e-mail or which domain at
 all... only SMTP servers from a particular IP Address or a range of IP
 Addresses.
 
 And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno where
 you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your home:
 call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu, and to
 request that manitu put them on a whitelist.
 
 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

hmmm... I just got ATT admins to fix their blocks a few weeks ago but I did 
have to be persistent and insistent.

you do what you have to do and if you start with a defeated attitude...

Craig
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 14:12:03 -0400:

 I'm not sure who you're answering or agreeing with, but my point is still
 that 90% of everybody blocked has no clue whatever about what to do about
 it, and esp. the people with infected systems. A standard channel *to* an
 ISP for this kind of technical issue - either the ISP notifying the
 spammer that their machine needs to be cleaned before they'll be allowed
 back online, or between ISP, would do something useful.

You confuse things. Either talk about RR (= ISP) or Bluehost (= Hosting 
Provider). *You cannot mix both.* Users on ISP networks are blocked by most 
mailservers for direct mail delivery, anyway. They have to use the 
smarthost of their ISP. That smarthost is supposed to make sure that the 
amount of spam originating from it is as small as possible. If they do that 
they are very unlikely to get on any list. If they do that they also care 
about getting on whitelists. If they don't do that you better look for 
another provider or other means to send out your mail. Of course, if you 
don't care either then you get what you paid for.


Kai


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 09:46:22 -0400:

 I'm sorry, nobody seems to get what I've been saying: I haven't been on
 roadrunner for two years. I'm sending this email via bluehost, my current
 hosting provider.

Ok, so you use Bluehost and one of their mailservers got on the list because 
spam was sent over it. Is that correct? There is an easy solution for them: 
they can ask Nixspam to be put on the whitelist or they can spamscan their 
outgoing SMTP (many hosting providers do that). Complain to them.

 AND THAT'S THE DIFFERENCE between you and manitu.net. You're not going for
 their whole IP range, which seems to be what manitu is doing.

Not correct. Nixspam adds single IP numbers once their spamtraps have 
received spam from them. The IP gets automatically removed after 12 or 24 
hours (look it up in their policy). That's fair enough, isn't it?

 Again, I haven't been with rr for two years. My current hosting provider,
 Bluehosts, is is telling me that I was banned.

*You* were banned or one of *their* mail servers got banned?

 
 Also, again, it isn't just me. What was it, earlier this year? late last
 year? one or two other folks were complaining, when they could *finally*
 post again, that they'd been banned.

It's simple. If there is no spam originating from that mail server it won't 
get on the list. If there is some spam originating from that mail server 
despite all good efforts to avoid that and they are on the whitelist it won't 
get on the list. In any other case I don't see why it shouldn't make it on 
the list if spam originates from it.

You got blocked this single one time in two years and you already complain? 
I'm sorry, but I have no sympathy for that. If it were going to happen 
frequently you would have my sympathy. But I would also tell you to move to a 
better host that cares more about not spamming.

Is it really the first time that you hear about the concept of RBLs? They 
have been around for years and have proven to be one of the most effective 
ways to combat spam, still.


Kai


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 1:16 PM, Always Learning wrote:

 Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime
 around the time when you move and change providers.

 You can not change the world on your own, even a little bit, without
 some help. Help from mass 'Internet connections' ISP staff is often
 dependent on not very intelligent people being able to understand your
 problem and then having the ability to forward-on your concerns to a
 more skilled person.

And it's fairly safe to assume that every IP range that permits 
uncontrolled customers _will_ have spam-forwarding viruses present. 
It's even likely on a slightly out of date CentOS box although I thought 
the botnets valued linux hosts more as coordinating nodes to distribute 
the workload.

 Your task can be onerous and arduous and it will consume your ever
 decreasing free-time.

 Be pragmatic. Accept partial defeat. Get an alternative email
 arrangement and you may become more happier.

 Incidentally as you run your own mail via Bluehost are you actually
 affected, at the moment, by manitu because, presumably, you can send-out
 by BH ?

The quick fix normally is to relay through the upstream ISP's mailer, 
although those sometimes are blacklisted too.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Josh Miller wrote:
 On 08/11/2011 11:12 AM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Josh Miller wrote:
 In fact, that is one of the single most effective mechanisms used to
 combat spam, in my experience and will cut down the amount accepted at
 the gateway(s) by up to 95%.

 I'm not sure who you're answering or agreeing with, but my point is
 still that 90% of everybody blocked has no clue whatever about what
 to do about it, and esp. the people with infected systems. A standard
 channel *to* an ISP for this kind of technical issue - either the
 ISP notifying the spammer that their machine needs to be cleaned
 before they'll be allowed back online, or between ISP, would do
snip
 *I* see from that is that people simply drop, or change services, and
 nothing gets fixed.
 snip
 Also, where I'm from (greater Seattle area even), you don't have much
 choice as far as ISPs go, so changing service providers is not a big
 option.

Yup. That's true most places (competition, *hah*). And all the major ISP's
I've dealt with since the conglomeration in Chicago of ISP's about 11
years ago have been the same: common carrier, but not understanding (as I
think of it) that spam is the same as problem noise on the line.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 14:12:03 -0400:

 I'm not sure who you're answering or agreeing with, but my point is
 still that 90% of everybody blocked has no clue whatever about what
 to do about it, and esp. the people with infected systems. A standard
 channel *to* an ISP for this kind of technical issue - either the
 ISP notifying the spammer that their machine needs to be cleaned
 before they'll be allowed back online, or between ISP, would do
 something useful.

 You confuse things. Either talk about RR (= ISP) or Bluehost (= Hosting
 Provider). *You cannot mix both.* Users on ISP networks are blocked by

I'm sorry if I've confused you. I used to be on RR when I lived in Chicago
twice, and also in central Florida; that was several years ago. The last
two years, I've used Bluehost/Hostmonster as my HP, and used them to send
mail, *not* using my local ISP (which happens to be the phone co).
snip

mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread m . roth
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 09:46:22 -0400:

 I'm sorry, nobody seems to get what I've been saying: I haven't been on
 roadrunner for two years. I'm sending this email via bluehost, my
 current
 hosting provider.

 Ok, so you use Bluehost and one of their mailservers got on the list
 because spam was sent over it. Is that correct? There is an easy
 solution for them: they can ask Nixspam to be put on the whitelist or
 they can spamscan their outgoing SMTP (many hosting providers do that).
 Complain to them.

Assuming I can get someone who is *willing* to bump it up to tier 2 or 3
support, who *might* be able to do something about it.

And I will do that. However, manitu has been a problem a number of times.

 Again, I haven't been with rr for two years. My current hosting
 provider, Bluehosts, is is telling me that I was banned.

 *You* were banned or one of *their* mail servers got banned?

It appears that mail coming from their mailhost's IP was banned.

 Also, again, it isn't just me. What was it, earlier this year? late last
 year? one or two other folks were complaining, when they could *finally*
 post again, that they'd been banned.

 You got blocked this single one time in two years and you already
 complain?

No. I've been blocked for a period ranging from hours to several days, and
kept getting myself unbanned, a number of times in the last couple of
years. And once or twice, the same time I was having this problem, there
were one or two others who, once they got unbanned, complained of the same
problem.
snip
 Is it really the first time that you hear about the concept of RBLs? They
 have been around for years and have proven to be one of the most effective
 ways to combat spam, still.

No, and I've always disagreed with the way they do it.

  mark

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 1:35 PM, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 Be pragmatic. Accept partial defeat. Get an alternative email
 arrangement and you may become more happier.

 NO. I WILL *NOT* allow the goddamned spammers to block me from the 'Net,
 and I'm *not* willing to have them cost me my email, and go to somewhere
 else; certainly not to someone's suggestion of yahoo (and they aren't
 banned by manitu?)

Nobody is blocking _you_.   The spam services just provide a listing 
that lets the recipients choose if they want to accept what you send 
from questionable locations.

 Incidentally as you run your own mail via Bluehost are you actually
 affected, at the moment, by manitu because, presumably, you can send-out
 by BH ?

 You misunderstand: I pay them for hosting. They provide the mailserver; it
 just comes from my domain on my virtual host on their servers. I don't run
 a business, so I'm not going to pay a *lot* more than $6US/mo to run my
 own mailserver

Many/most ISP's provide an upstream SMTP relay as part of the service. 
If they do, configure it as your smart_host and it will fix the problem. 
  If they don't, find some other relay service.  Sending authenticated 
smtp though a free gmail account would work but they might check to see 
if the From: address matches the account (haven't tested that).  The 
point is, that it will be easier to find a relay that someone trusts 
than to get the rest of the world to trust your random IP address in a 
block that anyone can get for $6/mo.  Or, feel free to waste your time 
trying to change the world, but don't expect a lot of sympathy for the 
pain of beating your head on a wall, even if the wall doesn't belong there.

-- 
  Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Stephen Harris
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 08:53:02PM +0200, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Is it really the first time that you hear about the concept of RBLs? They 
 have been around for years and have proven to be one of the most effective 
 ways to combat spam, still.

I'll love to see how they handle IPv6 once machines can use privacy
extensions and have a complete /48 to themselves...

They can't block whole subnets 'cos a /64 might be subnetted to different
customers (see linode, panix for two examples). 

Will be interesting!
-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 15:07:49 -0400:

 No. I've been blocked for a period ranging from hours to several days, and
 kept getting myself unbanned, a number of times in the last couple of
 years.

I see. So you got what you paid for.

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 11 Aug 2011 15:03:45 -0400:

 I'm sorry if I've confused you.

*You* confused things. You mixed ISPs and hosting. You can't. You were 
talking largely about ISPs and how their customers get blocked from 
sending mail directly and how they don't have a clue. I was trying to tell 
you that most mailservers won't accept mail from them, anyway.


Kai


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 11 Aug 2011, Les Mikesell wrote:

*snip*

 Many/most ISP's provide an upstream SMTP relay as part of 
 the service. If they do, configure it as your smart_host 
 and it will fix the problem. If they don't, find some 
 other relay service.

Is this any good?

http://www.noreply.org/echolot/rlist2.html

Keith

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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-11 Thread Les Mikesell
On 8/11/2011 4:56 PM, Keith Roberts wrote:
 On Thu, 11 Aug 2011, Les Mikesell wrote:

 *snip*

 Many/most ISP's provide an upstream SMTP relay as part of
 the service. If they do, configure it as your smart_host
 and it will fix the problem. If they don't, find some
 other relay service.

 Is this any good?

 http://www.noreply.org/echolot/rlist2.html

Different concept.  Those remailers try to remove identifying 
information from the headers.  For normal email you just want it to be 
sent from an address that others don't expect to be originating spam.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com


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[CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-10 Thread m . roth
listadmin,

   Can you PLEASE, PLEASE find *any* other blacklist than manitu? This
asshole's method was ok a dozen years ago; these days, with hosting sites
hosting tens or hundreds of thousands of domains, with too many running
Windows, and so infected and sending out spam. They then send all mail via
one mailhost, with the result that those of us with *no* spam coming out
are frequently blocked.

This ain't the first time for me with this jerk, either. A few years
ago, Cogeco in Canada was using him, and on and off for *months* I was
blocked from exchanging email with an old friend... because I was
mailing from Roadrunner in Chicago (hosting hundreds of thousands of
households), until my friend dropped Cogeco.

 mark, who is wondering if this will be blocked







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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-10 Thread Always Learning

On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 17:10 -0400, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:

 listadmin,
 
Can you PLEASE, PLEASE find *any* other blacklist than manitu? This
 asshole's method was ok a dozen years ago; these days, with hosting sites
 hosting tens or hundreds of thousands of domains, with too many running
 Windows, and so infected and sending out spam. They then send all mail via
 one mailhost, with the result that those of us with *no* spam coming out
 are frequently blocked.
 
 This ain't the first time for me with this jerk, either. A few years
 ago, Cogeco in Canada was using him, and on and off for *months* I was
 blocked from exchanging email with an old friend... because I was
 mailing from Roadrunner in Chicago (hosting hundreds of thousands of
 households), until my friend dropped Cogeco.
 
  mark, who is wondering if this will be blocked

No I got it in England, Europe.

Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)
on several servers. I refuse incoming mails where the sender's HELO /
EHLO does not match the sender's IP host name, because that - for me -
eliminates 90% or more of spam and I absolutely detest spam.

Discardable sub-domain names for mailing list subscriptions also helps.
(currently on my third change for this list ... u61)

Having spare domains, control over the DNS and assigning unique email
addresses for different purposes means you can simply bloke a
compromised email address whilst continuing to receive emails from
everyone else.  I've been doing this for about 10 years with great
success.

Spam is a USA invention created by someone called Wallace? about 15?
years ago. It is now a world-wide pest.

No Centos fan should have to depend on other's email services for daily
communications, so do consider operating your own mail server.



-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-10 Thread John R. Dennison
On Thu, Aug 11, 2011 at 03:08:46AM +0100, Always Learning wrote:
 
 Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)
 on several servers. I refuse incoming mails where the sender's HELO /
 EHLO does not match the sender's IP host name, because that - for me -
 eliminates 90% or more of spam and I absolutely detest spam.

Not everyone is in a position to run their own server.  Nor should
people be required to do so if they don't care to take on the burden of
doing so.

 Discardable sub-domain names for mailing list subscriptions also helps.
 (currently on my third change for this list ... u61)

Why?  I've been on this list for years all using the same address, which
I might add is the same address I have been using since the late 80s.

 Having spare domains, control over the DNS and assigning unique email
 addresses for different purposes means you can simply bloke a
 compromised email address whilst continuing to receive emails from
 everyone else.  I've been doing this for about 10 years with great
 success.

Waste of time and resources.  Learn how to properly handle email and
none of this nonsense is necessary.

 Spam is a USA invention created by someone called Wallace? about 15?
 years ago. It is now a world-wide pest.

The question marks indicate that you indeed don't know what you are
talking about.

 No Centos fan should have to depend on other's email services for daily
 communications, so do consider operating your own mail server.

Can you please stop with the sweeping statements that are without merit until
you fully understand the problem at hand?





John
-- 
Simply put, it's time.  Time for me.  And time for Chicago to move on.

-- Richard M. Daley, mayor of Chicago since 1989, announcing that he
   would not seek re-election, New York Times, 8 September 2010


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-10 Thread Always Learning

On Wed, 2011-08-10 at 21:36 -0500, John R. Dennison wrote:
 Waste of time and resources.  Learn how to properly handle email and
 none of this nonsense is necessary.

Properly handling emails means, to me, not being too reliant on others
whose faults and omissions could impair your ability to send and receive
mail . and not being a willing victim of spam ;-)



-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] drop manitu.net

2011-08-10 Thread Keith Roberts
On Thu, 11 Aug 2011, Always Learning wrote:

snip

 Why not run your own mail server ? I use Exim (a Sendmail replacement)
 on several servers. I refuse incoming mails where the sender's HELO /
 EHLO does not match the sender's IP host name, because that - for me -
 eliminates 90% or more of spam and I absolutely detest spam.

snip

 No Centos fan should have to depend on other's email services for daily
 communications, so do consider operating your own mail server.

I have been wondering about that myself.

I'm using postfix instead of sendmail:

postfix 0:off   1:off   2:on3:on4:on5:on 
6:off
...
sendmail0:off   1:off   2:off   3:off   4:off 
5:off   6:off

Can I use postfix to send outgoing emails directly from my 
machine, without opening any external ports? Or is that 
required for the server handshake protocol?

I did have problems with UCEprotect blocking outgoing emails 
from my ISP, on the m...@gnome.org list. But that appears to 
have rectified itself now :)

One way around it was to configure alpine MUA to send my 
outgoing email via my web hosting providers mail server, 
which they kindly agreed to.

Only problem with that was their mail server needed a 
password to connect to the server, and alpine is currently 
compiled without that option. So I had to enter the password 
whenever I wanted to send an email.

Kind Regards,

Keith Roberts

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