On Sat, 27 Aug 2005 19:05, Roberto Della Pasqua wrote: > >Sure. It will definitely stop people spamming from countries where > > spamming is illegal, by moving them all to countries >where it isn't. > > Using blacklisted domains inside servers can work very well considering the > auth procedure.
The problem with blacklisting is that it assumes all new servers are innocent.
A spammer gets to run amok until they're caught, and then change hostnames.
A combination of whitelisting and blacklisting would be more effective.
Server admins apply to a central authority (e.g. the JSF) to get on the
whitelist. The application process must not discriminate, but must take some
time, so that it discourages repeated applications. That way, new servers
are assumed guilty, and the only way spam gets to users is if the spam
server's admin took the time to register their server. That server then gets
blacklisted, and they have to wait a whole new week to register again.
If you do it with blacklists, the spam admin might just buy a new domain once
a day to get around it.
TX
--
Email: Trejkaz Xaoza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Web site: http://trypticon.org/
Jabber ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
GPG Fingerprint: 9EEB 97D7 8F7B 7977 F39F A62C B8C7 BC8B 037E EA73
pgpMdide7rIv2.pgp
Description: PGP signature
_______________________________________________ jdev mailing list [email protected] http://mail.jabber.org/mailman/listinfo/jdev
