Matt, I was surprised not to see either spamhaus or spamcop on your list - I'm assuming there is a reason why not, would you mind sharing your reasons?
Max On 4/25/06, Matt Sergeant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 25-Apr-06, at 5:31 PM, Max Clark wrote: > > > I have been using Sorbs as one of our DNSBL providers. They have > > always seemed more aggressive with their filtering but good on the > > whole. Lately I have been receiving more complaints from users that > > cannot receive email from yahoo.com subscribers - sure enough > > yahoo.com mail servers are listed in sorbs database for emailing a > > spamtrap. > > > > My question is this: given the density of users on > > yahoo/hotmail/gmail, how do I _bypass_ this lookup for these domains? > > Should I not be using dnsbl.sorbs.net? What do you use? > > The dnsbl plugin has no override/whitelist options, unfortunately. > Sorbs is known for being pretty bad at this sort of thing. I do use > it at home though, simply because I only have 2 users, so a few FPs > are easy to deal with. > > Here's my full list: > > cbl.abuseat.org > relays.ordb.org > sbl.spamhaus.org > opm.blitzed.org > list.dsbl.org > http.dnsbl.sorbs.net > socks.dnsbl.sorbs.net > misc.dnsbl.sorbs.net > smtp.dnsbl.sorbs.net > web.dnsbl.sorbs.net > zombie.dnsbl.sorbs.net > dul.dnsbl.sorbs.net > > CBL and DUL catches the most. > > Matt. > -- Max Clark http://www.clarksys.com
