Cats and mice? Sure is. It feeds my family at any rate. At the expense of 
knowing that if I and many like me slip up, it means another several poor 
schlubs got scammed or phished and end up with their bank accounts emptied and 
cards maxed out

Love my job, yeah I do :(

--srs
________________________________
From: Michael Thomas <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 7:55:36 AM
To: Suresh Ramasubramanian <[email protected]>; North American Network 
Operators Group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Worsening google service reputation and abuse



On 8/17/25 7:18 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
It isn’t just cops it is all the various people and orgs in the ecosystem who 
are all convinced they aren’t the internet police.

Yeah, so? It's just a cost of doing business. That's what's a joke about the 
people who think we can "defeat" this. We can't. It's cats and mouses all the 
way down.

Mike

--srs
________________________________
From: Michael Thomas via NANOG 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, August 18, 2025 7:46:01 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: Michael Thomas <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Worsening google service reputation and abuse


On 8/17/25 5:15 PM, Suresh Ramasubramanian via NANOG wrote:
> Real economics as a factor has been studied quite a lot - check for papers by 
> Vern Paxson, Stefan Savage etc and you’ll find some going back 20+ years.
>
> A lot of the real economic impact just doesn’t lie in technical solutions 
> though.


There is a lot of damage done for tons of things. Yet, Visa still
exists. Fraud exists. It's a cost of doing business. It's just petty
crime. Nothing is going to stop it. That is what the joke is. The cops
don't give a flying fuck about this, and never will. They don't care
about anything if it doesn't involve donuts.

Mike

>
> From: Marc Binderberger via NANOG 
> <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
> Date: Sunday, 17 August 2025 at 5:37 PM
> To: North American Network Operators Group 
> <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
> Cc: Marc Binderberger <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: Worsening google service reputation and abuse
>
>
> On Sat, 16 Aug 2025 17:24:04 -0700, Michael Thomas via NANOG wrote:
>
>> Barry has been going on about this idea for decades, I think. It wouldn't
>> work then, it won't work now.
> Until some idea suddenly works. Or an old idea becomes feasible.
>
> Frankly, many things we take for granted today would not exist with that
> "won't work" attitude. The better question (imho) to Barry is: how is your
> idea different from the already existing proposals?
>
> Barry has a reasonable theory - that the economics of spamming is brittle -
> but it is just that: a theory.
>
> And most of the (failed) proposals seem academic and avoid actual "costs" in
> terms of money. Or raise the real-world costs for everyone, if you need CPU
> cycles to participate in the email system. So Barry stepping out of this box
> and suggesting real economics as a factor is not unreasonable. I am not sure
> if there are more concrete details though (?).
>
>
>> Nobody can put up a coherent argument for why
>> the current cat and mouse situation isn't the acceptable balance,
> I guess "acceptable" can be defined as: Hey, I can always get a free personal
> account with gmail. And as a company I pay Google or Microsoft, save money on
> my IT staff. And good luck blocking "me" (i.e. Google, Microsoft).
>
> Maybe a problem if you are in the email business, fine with me, my domain is
> a private hobby. In fact, for all their "flaws", seeing the insanity of the
> know-it-all experts (some here on the list) I think I prefer Google
> requesting some reputation steps and a webpage explaining it. The
> alternative: being blocked for "Excessive Spam - Come back when you have
> fixed it". No further details. Sure, private domain, private VPS, no BL/score
> listing that I can find ... fortunately that blocking was just a Cc: to one
> of my posts, so I could not care less. The acceptable state of the mail
> system today!
>
> So there you may have an argument: that the increasing number of mechanisms,
> lists, tricks make the mail system less work-able and more broken. But I have
> no crystal ball, if email will finally break or will keep going - I don't
> know. Would be just sad if it breaks (but I have a gmail account as a backup
> ;-)
>
> Marc
>
>
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