Verizon's E-Mail Embargo Enrages
By John Gartner

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/ebiz/0,1272,66226,00.html

11:48 AM Jan. 10, 2005 PT

Verizon Communications customers expecting e-mail from across the pond may
be in for a long wait. The internet service provider has been blocking
e-mail originating from Great Britain and other parts of Europe for weeks,
and customers are upset about having their communications disrupted without
notice.

Verizon began blocking ranges of IP addresses belonging to British and
European ISPs on Dec. 22, according to the company. The blacklisting of
e-mail from abroad was in response to spam coming from the region, according
to a customer service representative at Verizon who identified himself only
as "Gary." He said company policy prevents him from giving out his last
name.

Since Dec. 28, dozens of Verizon customers have been posting their
frustrations on Verizon.adsl and verizon.email.discussion-general newsgroups
about being unable to receive e-mail from Britain, Germany, France and
Russia. Verizon customers describe the frustrations of not knowing how many
e-mails have been blocked and receiving contradictory information from
Verizon's customer service, and anger at switching to free e-mail accounts
until the problem is resolved.

"What essentially this policy has done is to make it clear to me that unless
they change their policy, Verizon's e-mails are not reliable enough even for
non-critical home usage," said Verizon user Robert Jacobson of Brooklyn, New
York, in an e-mail to Wired News.

Ashley Friedlein, CEO of consulting firm E-consultancy.com in London, said
several of his e-mails to Verizon customers bounced back but he assumed that
the recipient's inboxes were full.

Friedlein sees irony in an American ISP blocking e-mail from Europe. "I feel
a bit affronted because most of the spam we get is from the U.S.," Friedlein
said. He said that some of his bounced messages were replies to e-mails,
"which is about as un-spammy as you can get."

Mike Teixeira, a blacklist investigator for Mail Abuse Prevention Systems,
or MAPS, which provides ISPs with lists of known spammers, said his company
is always updating its blocking list, adding and removing IP addresses that
indicate the country of origin.

Wired News checked several e-mail accounts from Britain and Germany that
were being blocked by Verizon, and none of them were on MAPS' list of known
spammers. Teixeira said it was unusual to block e-mail coming from a
geographic region. "We would never block a whole country and say, 'England
is bad.'"

"Telephony companies are not so experienced in managing e-mail," said Dave
Ferris, president of Ferris Research. "It's easy to set the filters too
strong" and block valid addresses, he said, adding that companies need to be
able to dynamically filter spammers instead of maintaining lists that can
quickly become obsolete.

Ferris said ISPs such as AOL and MSN were making similar mistakes a year ago
during their spam-fighting efforts. "It sounds like (Verizon is) going
through a learning curve," he said.

Verizon media relations manager Ells Edwards said he did not know when
Verizon would discontinue its blocking of the European e-mail. "Normally
these things abate in a matter of days," Edwards said.

Verizon has more than 3 million DSL customers, according to Edwards.

Edwards suggested that Verizon customers who are waiting for an e-mail
response from Europe should use alternative forms of communication. "If it's
really important you might want to make a phone call," he said.

End of story



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