Darin wrote:
I think if the IETF or some other body can gain enough power to enforce
standards that are the consensus of the majority (probably best based on
customer base) it's the best chance we have.


The IETF or other independent body will not be able to enforce any
standards, they can make recommendations. And it is up to the internet
community to implement the standards and enforce the standards. The
standards are enforced wny people do not bend the rules for server or DNS
that is not in complience.

For example I notify all admins and users that their mail is being held due
to DNS configuration errors. When admins do not notify other admins there is
an issue with their configuration that is where the system breaks down. So I
applaud the big boys for finally enforcing the current standards by blocking
invalid reverse dns settings. Here is AOL's definition of a inproperly
configured RDNS entry.

-- snip from postmaster.aol.com --
Reverse DNS must be in the form of a fully-qualified domain name � reverse
DNSes containing in-addr.arpa are not acceptable, as these are merely
placeholders for a valid PTR record. Reverse DNSes consisting only of IP
addresses are also not acceptable, as they do not correctly establish the
relationship between domain and IP address.
-- end snip --


They are enforcing the standards already out there.

Kevin Bilbee





-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Hosting Support
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003 9:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS


Hi Pete,

I do agree with you on all of the problems you present in regards to a
governing body that can enforce it's will.  However, I think we're already
there to some degree with the fact that companies like AOL can enforce
policies locally that impact others and force them to adapt to their
wishes....except that it's N companies instead of a single standards board
This is not a much different from the "be careful what you wish for"
scenario you mentioned, just more chaotic.

You're certainly right on target on the "If everyone would just do it like I
do it" point.  However, I think we all realize compromises will be necessary
when working together, and I strongly believe that these problems will not
be solved without cooperation.

I think my main point is still key: I'd much rather be forced into
compliance by a standards body that has agreed on a course of action and
notifies me of necessary changes ahead of time than by N companies that all
make changes without notifying me, forcing me to scramble to address the
howling concerns of my customers.  Yes, it is possible that the standards
might be expensive enough to implement to drive some small companies out of
business, but that's not much different from the attrition we can see from
customers moving to large companies in order to ensure their email gets
delivered to other customers of said company.

So, yes, you're right.  There will be problems, and it's not a perfect
solution, but I think if the IETF or some other body can gain enough power
to enforce standards that are the consensus of the majority (probably best
based on customer base) it's the best chance we have.

Darin.


----- Original Message -----
From: Pete McNeil
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003 12:02 PM
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS


This is a common perception... and one that I share to some extent. None the
less, it's not an easy problem. The network runs on consensus - and that is
nearly impossible to build and enforce. Ultimately, we hope, what works will
win out and become recognized as a standard. That is more likely than any
body creating a "standard" and then "enforcing" it into place.

Some, with the power and money to do so, are capable of pushing their
"standards" onto the 'net... and that is both good and bad.

I guess my point is this: Picking somebody other than IETF to do this would
most likely change the name but produce the same result. Giving any strong
enforcement power to any such body would be disastrous because that power
would quickly be abused either directly or through compromise. Imagine, for
example, if VeriSign were in charge (chaching!) of how everything worked on
the Internet! (I know from personal experience that they would love that...
they may even feel entitled to it from some of the conversations I've
overheard.)

It's not an easy problem.

The answer resides in real solutions - not in enforcement. You can't pry a
good working solution from the cold dead hands of a good systems admin - or
even most mediocre ones, but you can be pretty sure that almost every
systems admin (good, bad, and ugly) will avoid using a bad solution no
matter what enforcement might be at work - if they have any alternative at
all.

The Internet is an interesting training ground for real life problems we've
yet to deal with on this planet. It only works when it really works...
network effects create tremendous leverage... but opportunities to
compromise the system for local motives will be exploited if they can be -
even if that means killing off the whole thing. (sad but we treat each other
this way too more often than not...) Broader vision and altruism are often
missing from the decision making process - so any single point of authority
with significant power finds itself corrupted and manipulated - if not from
the inside then from the outside.

Often we forget that we're all connected. Often when folks say that the
solution is in some strong central authority that can enforce a proper
standard, they are really saying "everything would be fine if everyone would
just do what I say." These folks fail to consider what it would be like if
they got their wish, but the "authority" decided to do things that they
couldn't live with. Be careful what you wish for - you might get it.

The Internet is a great model for this kind of problem - a problem that we
face every day without recognizing it. Humans have not yet discovered how to
work and solve these problems (at least not en-mass) - but perhaps they will
now that we can face them from a different perspective. It's easy to forget
we all breath the same air, but not so easy to forget when your email isn't
working ;-)

The IETF, like any body attempting to do that job, is mostly stuck battling
a never ending storm of conflicting self interest on the part of the
participants. When we (all) figure out how to solve those problems more
efficiently then good standards will emerge and consensus will be easier to
develop.

In the mean time, it's a race to develop good working solutions and hope
they catch on before too much damage is done - for all I know this method
might even be the model solution in the end... It seems to work in nature -
competing diversity, with successful paradigms sweeping away the old...
broad communication and collaboration offering advantage to those who
participate... it makes me think...

Sorry for all the philosophy...

_M

PS: A Beautiful Mind was a great movie (IMO). There was a great moment where
some complex realities of economics were crystallized and made transparent -
I love when that happens. Let's not all "go for the blonde".
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Hosting Support
Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2003 9:51 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS


Probably, but if so, they're not doing their job.  We need an organization
that is less ivory tower and more proactive in enforcing standards and best
practices.

Darin.


----- Original Message -----
From: Pete McNeil
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2003 10:38 PM
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS


Isn't the IETF supposed to be this body?
_M

At 09:14 PM 12/16/2003, you wrote:

I would agree with this type of governing body.  One that sets standards
like RDNS entries and what they mean.

< pessimistic rant>
But it is still up to each mail admin(s) to implement an anti-spam policy.
And the history of governing bodies is such that only the biggest players
have a voice.  This would probably mean that AOL, Earthlink, RR, Hotmail,
etc would be on the governing council�and it would be interpreted to their
greatest competitive advantage�and nothing would have changed!
</pessimistic rant>

Todd Holt
Xidix Technologies, Inc
Las Vegas, NV  USA
www.xidix.com
702.319.4349

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Hosting Support
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2003 4:47 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS

This is exactly why I think we should have a some sort of global internet
council for setting standards, rather than all of us little guys having to
react, after the fact, whenever a large player makes a change.  The global
council could maintain a distribution list to help mail admins to keep up
with proposed changes and implementation schedules.  This is very similar to
any other industry that must keep up with compliance standards.

In some ways this also seems like an unfair competition tactic as it makes
the little guys look bad when our customers can't send mail to AOL...it
encourages customers to move to the large players to avoid not having mail
delivered to their users.

Darin.


----- Original Message -----
From: Todd Holt
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2003 7:32 PM
Subject: RE: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS

I know this will stir a few people the wrong way, but�

If so many people are upset that MS is being monopolistic by using their
EULA to prevent software from operating, then why don�t those same people
get upset at AOL for the internet-nazi-police tactics used to prevent mail
from being delivered?

MS just says that you can�t use certain apps on their OS.  AOL says that you
can�t deliver mail through mail servers (that control more email than any
other on the planet) because they deemed it �bad� through inaccurate,
generalized and dare I say �monopolistic� policies.

The lack of complaints about AOL just shows that the MS bashers are not
upset about the MS policies (or monopoly), they just want to complain about
the big company on the block.  I think if the majority owner of AOL was the
richest person on the planet, they would bash AOL.  How short sided!!!

Further, all of the justice dept. proceedings are based on complaints by the
competition, not the users.  On the other hand, AOL has thousands of
consumer complaints, but very few (if any) complaints by competitors.  It�s
obvious that the justice dept. just wants to appease whiny losers like Jim
Barksdale and Scott McNealy.  And the MS bashers just fall in line.
Lemmings.

Todd Holt
Xidix Technologies, Inc
Las Vegas, NV  USA
www.xidix.com
702.319.4349

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andy Schmidt
Sent: Tuesday, December 16, 2003 3:26 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] AOL and Reverse DNS

Hi,

I just noticed that AOL has stepped up their policies another notch.

They used to say that "AOL  **MAY**" not accept email from servers without
Reverse DNS.
In the last two weeks, that changed:
http://postmaster.aol.com/guidelines/standards.html

AOL's servers will not accept connections from unsecured systems. These
include open relays, open proxies, open routers, or any other system that
has been determined to be available for unauthorized use.
AOL's mail servers will not accept connections from systems that use
dynamically assigned or residential IP addresses.
AOL will not deliver e-mail that contains a hex-encoded Universal Resource
Locator (URL). (Ex: http://%6d%6e%3f/)
AOL's mail servers will reject connections from any IP address that does not
have reverse DNS (a PTR record).



Best Regards
Andy Schmidt

H&M Systems Software, Inc.
600 East Crescent Avenue, Suite 203
Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458-1846

Phone:  +1 201 934-3414 x20 (Business)
Fax:    +1 201 934-9206

http://www.HM-Software.com/


---
[This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)]

---
This E-mail came from the Declude.JunkMail mailing list.  To
unsubscribe, just send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and
type "unsubscribe Declude.JunkMail".  The archives can be found
at http://www.mail-archive.com.

Reply via email to