You are the only person who has mentioned reverse DNS lookups.

However, it is true that you do in fact need to already know the identity of 
the sending MTA/MSA before you can do a "reverse DNS lookup".  What does this 
have to do with the price of tea in China?

And what value do you think a reverse DNS lookup adds to the identity 
information you already (obviously) have?

--
The fact that there's a Highway to Hell but only a Stairway to Heaven says a 
lot about anticipated traffic volume.


>-----Original Message-----
>From: Michael Thomas [mailto:m...@fresheez.com] On Behalf Of Michael
>Thomas
>Sent: Monday, 8 July, 2019 19:12
>To: Keith Medcalf; nanog@nanog.org
>Subject: Re: SHAKEN/STIR Robocall Summit - July 11 2019 at FCC
>
>Jon Callas, Eric Allman, the IETF security geek contingent and even
>me
>disagree with you. rfc 4871 disagrees with you. STD 76 disagrees with
>you. Trillions of signed messages disagree with you. Steve Bellovin
>probably disagrees with you too since you seem to be under the
>illusion
>that a reverse DNS lookup tells you anything useful.
>
>::eyeroll::
>
>Mike
>
>On 7/8/19 6:06 PM, Keith Medcalf wrote:
>> Wow!
>>
>> You must not know much about networking or programming if you do
>not know how to ask the OS to tell you the address/port associated
>with the "other end" of a TCP connection.  Obviously you know who is
>sending the message since they are in bidirectional communication
>with you at the time you are receiving the message, and you need to
>know where to send the "carry on James" prompts to get them to send
>more data...
>>
>> Therefore you always know who submitted a message.
>>



Reply via email to