I understand that their usage is different. I was asking more about their implementations and how ASSP uses them.
I'm getting a lot of spam that don't hit RBL or URIBL through that have spammy URLs, so I was thinking that a RHSBL like Day Old Bread (http://support-intelligence.com/dob/ ) could catch them better too. It lists itself as a DNSBL, but by using domain names, it's actually an RHSBL. Thus my questions on if ASSP could use RHSBLs in the URIBL field. Daniel L. Miller wrote: > David wrote: > >> What is the difference between DNSBL and URIBL providers? >> >> From what I understand, it's just that DNSBL uses IPs and URIBLs use >> the domain name in the query. Is this right? >> >> As in a DNSBL queries with reversed-ip-address.dnsblprovider.com; and a >> URIBL uses domain-name.uriblprovider.com >> >> Are URIBLs the same thing as RHSBLs (Right hand side black list, uses >> domain names)? If so, can a RHSBL be used in the URIBL provider field in >> ASSP >> > Totally different. URIBLs are for content, not for sender domains. If > a message contains a spammy URI - as in "click here to update your bank > account's compromised password - http://www.gotchanow.com" then the > message is flagged/junked. > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by DB2 Express Download DB2 Express C - the FREE version of DB2 express and take control of your XML. No limits. Just data. Click to get it now. http://sourceforge.net/powerbar/db2/ _______________________________________________ Assp-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/assp-user
