On Oct 9, 2006, at 15:29, Tim wrote:
Its purpose is to reject *all* mail from bogus MTAs - dialups,
misconifigured servers, MTAs that aren't registered in the
domains' DNS as
a "legal" MX, MTAs that don't reverse properly, etc., etc. If the
email is
forged in any way, it will never make it to DATA.
That's great, except it makes the internet more expensive for the
little
guy. If you're trying to run a non-spamming personal mailserver
off of
a consumer DSL or cable line, you can get screwed by others' policies
like this because you may not have control over your PTR records or
how
your ISP lists you as a non-MTA with other organizations.
Some university campuses maintain strict control over their reverse
DNS entries, and so departments or on-campus organizations, research
institutes, etc. that run their own mail servers will have non-
matching forward and reverse DNS entries on their MX hosts. Blocking
rules like this make life difficult for them as well.
Cases such as these raise the question, if the blocked mail never
gets into your network, how would you know about the rate of false-
positives?
Brent
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This List Sponsored by: Black Hat
Attend the Black Hat Briefings & Training USA, July 29-August 3 in Las Vegas.
World renowned security experts reveal tomorrow's threats today. Free of
vendor pitches, the Briefings are designed to be pragmatic regardless of your
security environment. Featuring 36 hands-on training courses and 10 conference
tracks, networking opportunities with over 2,500 delegates from 40+ nations.
http://www.blackhat.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------------