Ademar Gonzalez wrote:
On 6/7/06, Simon Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
ok, that makes sense... will greylisting counter this?
don't think graylisting will have much effect, each bot sending a few
mails.
Greylisting works by temporarily rejecting the first email from a sender
at an ip address to a recipient, and then waiting the see if the sending
mail server tries again as it should. If the server retries, the
ip:sender:recipient tuple is added to a database and not delayed ever again.
Most spam-sending programs never retry, even with a temporary error. So
greylisting would probably help in this case.
What would really help is SPF, if you can manage it. That way you can
reject mail that claims to come from your domain but does not come from
your mail servers. But this is all a bit OT, not really full disclosure.
--
Pam
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