Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-20 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Markus Falb wrote:
> On 17.7.2011 23:52, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
>> Always Learning wrote:
> 
>>> Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?
> 
>> Mine uses proper name, but then again I am one of the few in my country 
>> to offer POP3 on SSL port 465. And I am small local WISP.
> 
> Probably you meant smtps (smtp over ssl) not pop3.
> 
> -- Kind Regards, Markus Falb
> 

Yes, you are right. SMTPS. thinking one thing and writing another is not 
good. Nice catch, thanks.

-- 

Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe

Google is the Mother, Google is the Father, and traceroute is your
trusty Spiderman...
StarOS, Mikrotik and CentOS/RHEL/Linux consultant
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-20 Thread Markus Falb
On 17.7.2011 23:52, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
> Always Learning wrote:

>> Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?

> Mine uses proper name, but then again I am one of the few in my country 
> to offer POP3 on SSL port 465. And I am small local WISP.

Probably you meant smtps (smtp over ssl) not pop3.

-- Kind Regards, Markus Falb



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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Steve Clark

On 07/18/2011 02:37 PM, Steve Clark wrote:

On 07/18/2011 01:00 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:

On 7/18/2011 11:25 AM, ?? ?? wrote:

So do you typically provide helpful answers to forum questions sooner
after they are posted when you have to forum-hop than you would if they
land in your inbox or later?

Obviously some level of activity must be maintained within a community
to ensure decent response times, but newer communities such as Ubuntu
have found forums to be a fairly useful thing. The forum community there
is doing well and questions get answered at a reasonable pace -- with
the added benefit that when someone goes on vacation they have no box
that needs filtering, unsubscribing, setting in a vacation state, etc.
to protect from lists or spam. Outside of the tech world forums have
proven themselves durable and usable for help and feedback purposes --
overwhelmingly so.

I don't think Ubuntu is a reasonable project example unless you can come
up with a way to match it's resources, which I believe include paid
participants.  Who is going to hover over a forum waiting to answer
questions otherwise?


So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
forums without any of the hassles of either.

Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem
with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of
the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.

Newsreaders require a news server. News servers can be run by anyone, it
doesn't require a global cabal to serve news. In the later days of
usenet it was overwhelmed by crap, largely because of the enormous
number of groups created by people who didn't have time to maintain
them, had a blanket anonymous publish policy, and eventually never
showed back up to take care of their lists.

You make it sound accidental. That's not the way I remember it.


What I am describing is the running of a newsgroup server specific to a
project or interest, say news.centos.org (or whatever for whatever).
Initial validation would be required (not unusual for mailing lists) for
initial posting, and after that unmoderated publication would be
permitted by a validated user. This is a simple system. Disabling
attachments and/or setting file/message size limits is trivial and is an
action which occurs in just one place (the server) and doesn't bother
the users.

So if you have 100 interests, you'd have to establish and maintain 100
logins and passwords - and configure them on every device/application
you use for access.  That's not my idea of convenience.


 From an anti-spam/security perspective a post/fetch system is simply
more suitable for noise-free discourse than email.

I just don't see the distinction other than having more possibility of
after-the-fact cleanup before delivery - and then only if someone goes
to the trouble of doing it and you are slow in your fetching.


That we have
forgotten that is likely more due to the timing of the web explosion in
the early 90's and the tech/generation gap it produced than anything
else.

Ummm, no.  There was always a lot more crap posted to usenet than there
is here.  Maybe you've forgotten that.


A news service with censorship might be OK.  Until they censor something
that you wanted to say or see.  Forums with rss feeds might be a middle
ground to centralize the reading side but there's still the issue of
standardizing the forum interfaces so you don't have to figure out how
to reply again for every interesting topic.

You have just described properly run newsgroups -- and why I am
suggesting them as a reasonable course of action which would resolve
spam issues not just within list, but limit everyone's exposure to spam
in their general mail boxes.

The protocol for the transfer doesn't really matter here.  What you
propose isn't particularly different than setting up local email service
with accounts for all users for every list.  That is, it would be
equally inconvenient and not solve any of the underlying problems.


Hmm... I am on a number of ML one of which is LKML and I find the amount of 
spam is miniscule in comparison to the
number of messages.

Also trying to keep up with all the topics and new threads on any forum I have 
been on seems much more difficult than
on any mailing list.

I have thunderbird setup to read mail threaded and if its a thread I am not 
interested a simple CTL-t marks any new messages
as read.

oops should have been just 't' not ctl-t.
--
Stephen Clark
*NetWolves*
Sr. Software Engineer III
Phone: 813-579-3200
Fax: 813-882-0209
Email: steve.cl...@netwolves.com
http://www.netwolves.com
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Steve Clark

On 07/18/2011 01:00 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:

On 7/18/2011 11:25 AM, ?? ?? wrote:

So do you typically provide helpful answers to forum questions sooner
after they are posted when you have to forum-hop than you would if they
land in your inbox or later?

Obviously some level of activity must be maintained within a community
to ensure decent response times, but newer communities such as Ubuntu
have found forums to be a fairly useful thing. The forum community there
is doing well and questions get answered at a reasonable pace -- with
the added benefit that when someone goes on vacation they have no box
that needs filtering, unsubscribing, setting in a vacation state, etc.
to protect from lists or spam. Outside of the tech world forums have
proven themselves durable and usable for help and feedback purposes --
overwhelmingly so.

I don't think Ubuntu is a reasonable project example unless you can come
up with a way to match it's resources, which I believe include paid
participants.  Who is going to hover over a forum waiting to answer
questions otherwise?


So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
forums without any of the hassles of either.

Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem
with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of
the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.

Newsreaders require a news server. News servers can be run by anyone, it
doesn't require a global cabal to serve news. In the later days of
usenet it was overwhelmed by crap, largely because of the enormous
number of groups created by people who didn't have time to maintain
them, had a blanket anonymous publish policy, and eventually never
showed back up to take care of their lists.

You make it sound accidental. That's not the way I remember it.


What I am describing is the running of a newsgroup server specific to a
project or interest, say news.centos.org (or whatever for whatever).
Initial validation would be required (not unusual for mailing lists) for
initial posting, and after that unmoderated publication would be
permitted by a validated user. This is a simple system. Disabling
attachments and/or setting file/message size limits is trivial and is an
action which occurs in just one place (the server) and doesn't bother
the users.

So if you have 100 interests, you'd have to establish and maintain 100
logins and passwords - and configure them on every device/application
you use for access.  That's not my idea of convenience.


 From an anti-spam/security perspective a post/fetch system is simply
more suitable for noise-free discourse than email.

I just don't see the distinction other than having more possibility of
after-the-fact cleanup before delivery - and then only if someone goes
to the trouble of doing it and you are slow in your fetching.


That we have
forgotten that is likely more due to the timing of the web explosion in
the early 90's and the tech/generation gap it produced than anything
else.

Ummm, no.  There was always a lot more crap posted to usenet than there
is here.  Maybe you've forgotten that.


A news service with censorship might be OK.  Until they censor something
that you wanted to say or see.  Forums with rss feeds might be a middle
ground to centralize the reading side but there's still the issue of
standardizing the forum interfaces so you don't have to figure out how
to reply again for every interesting topic.

You have just described properly run newsgroups -- and why I am
suggesting them as a reasonable course of action which would resolve
spam issues not just within list, but limit everyone's exposure to spam
in their general mail boxes.

The protocol for the transfer doesn't really matter here.  What you
propose isn't particularly different than setting up local email service
with accounts for all users for every list.  That is, it would be
equally inconvenient and not solve any of the underlying problems.


Hmm... I am on a number of ML one of which is LKML and I find the amount of 
spam is miniscule in comparison to the
number of messages.

Also trying to keep up with all the topics and new threads on any forum I have 
been on seems much more difficult than
on any mailing list.

I have thunderbird setup to read mail threaded and if its a thread I am not 
interested a simple CTL-t marks any new messages
as read.

My $.02

Regards,
Steve

--
Stephen Clark
*NetWolves*
Sr. Software Engineer III
Phone: 813-579-3200
Fax: 813-882-0209
Email: steve.cl...@netwolves.com
http://www.netwolves.com
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread m . roth
夜神 岩男 wrote:
> On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 10:54 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
>> On 7/18/2011 10:27 AM, 夜神 岩男 wrote:
>> >

>> > So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
>> > the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
>> > as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
>> > forums without any of the hassles of either.
>>
>> Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem
>> with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of
>> the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.
>
> Newsreaders require a news server. News servers can be run by anyone, it
> doesn't require a global cabal to serve news. In the later days of
> usenet it was overwhelmed by crap, largely because of the enormous
> number of groups created by people who didn't have time to maintain
> them, had a blanket anonymous publish policy, and eventually never
> showed back up to take care of their lists. Lists such as that got
> swamped, and so did the servers, which made the whole system unweidly
> (though news server networks are still run today and moderation via user
> validation is still an option).

The beginning of its downhill slide, IMO, was when AOL got on. I remember
that happening: AOL auto-subscribed *all* its users to certain newsgroups,
and for some utterly clueless reason, that included alt.best.of.internet.
I occasionally dipped into that group, and the flamewars started then,
with idiots announcing that they could post anything they wanted, anywhere
they wanted. That, and the Green Card Spam, where K&S proclaimed that
there was no such thing as "community", that it was all the wild west.
>
> What I am describing is the running of a newsgroup server specific to a
> project or interest, say news.centos.org (or whatever for whatever).

A big eight newsgroup, moderated, is what this sounds like. Let me note
that if you want, I can point you to a quite good robomoderator: it
approves regular posters, checks new for on-topic, and if it can't make up
its mind, forwards it to designated human moderators.


 mark

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/18/2011 11:25 AM, 夜神 岩男 wrote:
>
>> So do you typically provide helpful answers to forum questions sooner
>> after they are posted when you have to forum-hop than you would if they
>> land in your inbox or later?
>
> Obviously some level of activity must be maintained within a community
> to ensure decent response times, but newer communities such as Ubuntu
> have found forums to be a fairly useful thing. The forum community there
> is doing well and questions get answered at a reasonable pace -- with
> the added benefit that when someone goes on vacation they have no box
> that needs filtering, unsubscribing, setting in a vacation state, etc.
> to protect from lists or spam. Outside of the tech world forums have
> proven themselves durable and usable for help and feedback purposes --
> overwhelmingly so.

I don't think Ubuntu is a reasonable project example unless you can come 
up with a way to match it's resources, which I believe include paid 
participants.  Who is going to hover over a forum waiting to answer 
questions otherwise?

>>> So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
>>> the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
>>> as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
>>> forums without any of the hassles of either.
>>
>> Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem
>> with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of
>> the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.
>
> Newsreaders require a news server. News servers can be run by anyone, it
> doesn't require a global cabal to serve news. In the later days of
> usenet it was overwhelmed by crap, largely because of the enormous
> number of groups created by people who didn't have time to maintain
> them, had a blanket anonymous publish policy, and eventually never
> showed back up to take care of their lists.

You make it sound accidental. That's not the way I remember it.

> What I am describing is the running of a newsgroup server specific to a
> project or interest, say news.centos.org (or whatever for whatever).
> Initial validation would be required (not unusual for mailing lists) for
> initial posting, and after that unmoderated publication would be
> permitted by a validated user. This is a simple system. Disabling
> attachments and/or setting file/message size limits is trivial and is an
> action which occurs in just one place (the server) and doesn't bother
> the users.

So if you have 100 interests, you'd have to establish and maintain 100 
logins and passwords - and configure them on every device/application 
you use for access.  That's not my idea of convenience.

> From an anti-spam/security perspective a post/fetch system is simply
> more suitable for noise-free discourse than email.

I just don't see the distinction other than having more possibility of 
after-the-fact cleanup before delivery - and then only if someone goes 
to the trouble of doing it and you are slow in your fetching.

> That we have
> forgotten that is likely more due to the timing of the web explosion in
> the early 90's and the tech/generation gap it produced than anything
> else.

Ummm, no.  There was always a lot more crap posted to usenet than there 
is here.  Maybe you've forgotten that.

>> A news service with censorship might be OK.  Until they censor something
>> that you wanted to say or see.  Forums with rss feeds might be a middle
>> ground to centralize the reading side but there's still the issue of
>> standardizing the forum interfaces so you don't have to figure out how
>> to reply again for every interesting topic.
>
> You have just described properly run newsgroups -- and why I am
> suggesting them as a reasonable course of action which would resolve
> spam issues not just within list, but limit everyone's exposure to spam
> in their general mail boxes.

The protocol for the transfer doesn't really matter here.  What you 
propose isn't particularly different than setting up local email service 
with accounts for all users for every list.  That is, it would be 
equally inconvenient and not solve any of the underlying problems.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com



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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Christopher Chan
On Monday, July 18, 2011 11:29 PM, 夜神 岩男 wrote:
> On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 22:17 +0800, Christopher Chan wrote:
>> On Monday, July 18, 2011 09:19 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
>>
>> SPAM-L is that way ==>  oh wait, it's dead...
>>
>> Maybe we can keep discussions about blackhat, incompetent networks,
>> about SMTP, open proxies/relays, honeypots and what have you off this list?
>>
>> Just limit it to sendmail/postfix/exim configuration if you have to
>> discuss these things but please leave everything else outside in
>> NANAE/your favourite spitting pot.
>
> You wouldn't be insinuating that "[CentOS] SPAM on the list" has become
> SPAM on the list now, would you?
>

Kinda hard...I mean, SPAM is edible you know and I don't remember being 
able to transport SPAM over email.

But it has become offtopic and is no longer relevant to Centos. We don't 
need another SPAM-L/NANAE/whatever
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Devin Reade
--On Sunday, July 17, 2011 10:37:53 PM -0400 Stephen Harris
 wrote:

> RFC2821 says:
>-  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
>   host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
>   has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
> 
> So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
> 
> (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

Thank you for posting that.

Despite the garden path we got down, my previous comments didn't say
that you had to accept *anything*, but merely that too stringent of a
check would eliminate some valid mailers.  There's nothing like 
stirring a can of worms :)

Devin

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread 夜神 岩男
On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 10:54 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 7/18/2011 10:27 AM, 夜神 岩男 wrote:
> >
> >> (6) Having to visit a web site and then log-on if one wants to respond.
> >
> > I keychain the logins (I think most browsers have a function like this
> > now -- I think even elinks does, and elinks is a great way to browse
> > forums, btw) and don't worry too much with it after that.
> 
> So do you typically provide helpful answers to forum questions sooner 
> after they are posted when you have to forum-hop than you would if they 
> land in your inbox or later?

Obviously some level of activity must be maintained within a community
to ensure decent response times, but newer communities such as Ubuntu
have found forums to be a fairly useful thing. The forum community there
is doing well and questions get answered at a reasonable pace -- with
the added benefit that when someone goes on vacation they have no box
that needs filtering, unsubscribing, setting in a vacation state, etc.
to protect from lists or spam. Outside of the tech world forums have
proven themselves durable and usable for help and feedback purposes --
overwhelmingly so.

> > I find this to be a *lot* less trouble than twisting my email setup into
> > something email was never intended to be.
> 
> Email wasn't intended for receiving messages and replying?  Hmmm...

It was designed precisely to do those things. What was described by the
previous poster was time consuming contrivances with the specific intent
of limiting the receipt of messages -- which is exactly half of the
specification as you stated it.

> > So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
> > the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
> > as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
> > forums without any of the hassles of either.
> 
> Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem 
> with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of 
> the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.

Newsreaders require a news server. News servers can be run by anyone, it
doesn't require a global cabal to serve news. In the later days of
usenet it was overwhelmed by crap, largely because of the enormous
number of groups created by people who didn't have time to maintain
them, had a blanket anonymous publish policy, and eventually never
showed back up to take care of their lists. Lists such as that got
swamped, and so did the servers, which made the whole system unweidly
(though news server networks are still run today and moderation via user
validation is still an option).

What I am describing is the running of a newsgroup server specific to a
project or interest, say news.centos.org (or whatever for whatever).
Initial validation would be required (not unusual for mailing lists) for
initial posting, and after that unmoderated publication would be
permitted by a validated user. This is a simple system. Disabling
attachments and/or setting file/message size limits is trivial and is an
action which occurs in just one place (the server) and doesn't bother
the users.

From an anti-spam/security perspective a post/fetch system is simply
more suitable for noise-free discourse than email. That we have
forgotten that is likely more due to the timing of the web explosion in
the early 90's and the tech/generation gap it produced than anything
else.

> A news service with censorship might be OK.  Until they censor something 
> that you wanted to say or see.  Forums with rss feeds might be a middle 
> ground to centralize the reading side but there's still the issue of 
> standardizing the forum interfaces so you don't have to figure out how 
> to reply again for every interesting topic.

You have just described properly run newsgroups -- and why I am
suggesting them as a reasonable course of action which would resolve
spam issues not just within list, but limit everyone's exposure to spam
in their general mail boxes.

-Iwao

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/18/2011 10:27 AM, 夜神 岩男 wrote:
>
>> (6) Having to visit a web site and then log-on if one wants to respond.
>
> I keychain the logins (I think most browsers have a function like this
> now -- I think even elinks does, and elinks is a great way to browse
> forums, btw) and don't worry too much with it after that.

So do you typically provide helpful answers to forum questions sooner 
after they are posted when you have to forum-hop than you would if they 
land in your inbox or later?

> I find this to be a *lot* less trouble than twisting my email setup into
> something email was never intended to be.

Email wasn't intended for receiving messages and replying?  Hmmm...

> So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
> the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
> as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
> forums without any of the hassles of either.

Interesting that you bring this up in the context of spam.  The problem 
with net news is that all of the servers stopped handling it because of 
the porn and copyright-infringing binaries postings that overwhelm it.

> That we aren't communicating through a newsgroup has always been
> puzzling to me for the exact reasons that you and I both listed. If we
> were to design a new protocol to solve both problems it would likely
> turn out to be very like newsgroups -- yet we don't use them and they
> exist and are easy to set up.

A news service with censorship might be OK.  Until they censor something 
that you wanted to say or see.  Forums with rss feeds might be a middle 
ground to centralize the reading side but there's still the issue of 
standardizing the forum interfaces so you don't have to figure out how 
to reply again for every interesting topic.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Always Learning

On Tue, 2011-07-19 at 00:27 +0900, 夜神 岩男 wrote:

>> (1) Spyware : logging every access with Google the USA's
>> international spying operation.

> Mailing lists do not avoid this (if they do, please explain how),
> particularly now that Google has people using its own parallel DNS
> service (!o!) and runs infrastructure that most of these tech mailing
> lists touch at some point. At this point I doubt that there is a
> message sent that doesn't touch or at least bounce toward a
> Google-owned server somewhere.

Not the message contents but the IP address, browser details of the user
reading the forum. All added to the user's IP record at Google
Monitoring.


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread 夜神 岩男
On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 22:17 +0800, Christopher Chan wrote:
> On Monday, July 18, 2011 09:19 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> 
> SPAM-L is that way ==> oh wait, it's dead...
> 
> Maybe we can keep discussions about blackhat, incompetent networks, 
> about SMTP, open proxies/relays, honeypots and what have you off this list?
> 
> Just limit it to sendmail/postfix/exim configuration if you have to 
> discuss these things but please leave everything else outside in 
> NANAE/your favourite spitting pot.

You wouldn't be insinuating that "[CentOS] SPAM on the list" has become
SPAM on the list now, would you?

-Iwao

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread 夜神 岩男
On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 15:00 +0100, Always Learning wrote:

> In the example I mentioned, it was a specially created single purpose
> email SMTP address (no POP etc.) used just once about 5? months ago. It
> is easy for me to block it as the mail server (MTA Mail Transfer Agent)
> which I have done.

An address can get snagged once after a single use and spammed months
later. Creating a plethora of special use email accounts is, in my
opinion, simply too much effort when the original design of email was to
create a public address that anyone can contact the owner through. 

> We are no so liberal with mailboxes. Some can be accessed only by prior
> approved senders. Others, because they are single purpose email
> addresses, can be permanently blocked after the first unwanted email.
> Some email addresses are created with sub-domains that can be dropped at
> the first abuse then replaced by new sub-domains.

Getting too creative with email protections reduces the primary
functionality it was invented to provide.

> > The difference between deposit/fetch and send/receive is profound. This
> > is part of why I'm surprised that newsreaders and forums have fallen
> > from favor amongst technical discussion groups. The "Logging into forums
> > is a PITA" or "setting up another client is a PITA" arguments obviously
> > won the debate -- though I think spam is a lot deeper into PITA
> > territory than either at the present time.
> 
> The problems with forums are, in my personal opinion:-
> 
> (1) Spyware : logging every access with Google the USA's international
> spying operation.

Mailing lists do not avoid this (if they do, please explain how),
particularly now that Google has people using its own parallel DNS
service (!o!) and runs infrastructure that most of these tech mailing
lists touch at some point. At this point I doubt that there is a message
sent that doesn't touch or at least bounce toward a Google-owned server
somewhere.

> (2) Advertisements

On a bad forum, yes. On good ones, no. The advertising thing is
ridiculous and a symptom of our community not realizing how easy it is
to self-host forums for free (or newsgroups -- but more on that later).

> (3) tiny text difficult to read

On bad forums, maybe. I haven't been to a site I found difficult to
read, come to think of it, but I'm sure there are some administrators
out there who don't understand the concepts of usability. Anyway, you
can generally control your mail display settings and forums would
present a potentially mixed bag unless the community settled on a rough
standard, so I can see your point here.

> (4) Pop-up windows

On unbearably crap forums, maybe. I've never experienced this (Firefox
always saved me or there just were never pop ups? No idea), but if any
official project decided to use forums as a primary communication means
and put not just ads, but *pop-up ads* on their site -- wow...

> (5) Layout not conducive to easy and quick reading.

The free-form layout of mailing lists (top/bottom/mid posting all
mishmashed) is far less conducive to organized eye movements, in my
experience. Obviously, you and I may have adapted differently, though I
find neither difficult.

> (6) Having to visit a web site and then log-on if one wants to respond.

I keychain the logins (I think most browsers have a function like this
now -- I think even elinks does, and elinks is a great way to browse
forums, btw) and don't worry too much with it after that.

I find this to be a *lot* less trouble than twisting my email setup into
something email was never intended to be.

> Conversely:-
> 
> Email Lists are quick, easy, immediate (certainly for my set-up),
> require no extra effort.  Should the address get spammed, then its one
> quick and simple change:-
> 
> (a) replacement DNS sub-domain
> 
> (b) update Mailman
> 
> (c) change email address in email client.

Again, far too much trouble.

So... what is wrong with newsreaders? In my experience the provide all
the benefits of email (speed, uniform interface, etc.) that you listed
as well as all the benefits of a post/fetch paradigm that I get from
forums without any of the hassles of either.

That we aren't communicating through a newsgroup has always been
puzzling to me for the exact reasons that you and I both listed. If we
were to design a new protocol to solve both problems it would likely
turn out to be very like newsgroups -- yet we don't use them and they
exist and are easy to set up.

Anyway, interesting response. Cheers.

-Iwao

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Christopher Chan
On Monday, July 18, 2011 09:19 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:

SPAM-L is that way ==> oh wait, it's dead...

Maybe we can keep discussions about blackhat, incompetent networks, 
about SMTP, open proxies/relays, honeypots and what have you off this list?

Just limit it to sendmail/postfix/exim configuration if you have to 
discuss these things but please leave everything else outside in 
NANAE/your favourite spitting pot.
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Always Learning

On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 15:45 +0900, 夜神 岩男 wrote:

> On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 04:04 +0100, Always Learning wrote:

> > It seems spammers have successfully hacked Rupert Murdock's London Times
> > newspaper and copied hundreds of thousands of email addresses or has a
> > member of staff sold the email addresses to spammers to make some money?

> Though it is certainly possible that a breach of some sort is
> responsible for your spam, sniffing for email headers on high activity
> parts of a network would be sufficient to collect a large number of
> active email addresses to try (sniffing at Tor gateways could provide
> interesting results, come to think of it). Another big winner for
> mailbox collection is to not crack the information provider's site, but
> to instead crack the email service provider and obtain a list of all
> active accounts on that server (which would likely span multiple
> domains).

In the example I mentioned, it was a specially created single purpose
email SMTP address (no POP etc.) used just once about 5? months ago. It
is easy for me to block it as the mail server (MTA Mail Transfer Agent)
which I have done.

> Getting a hold of email accounts can happen any number of ways, most of
> them uncontrollable by the account holder. Its a mailbox -- an open
> destination for the world to send you stuff. You can't be too surprised
> when the world does in fact send you stuff.

We are no so liberal with mailboxes. Some can be accessed only by prior
approved senders. Others, because they are single purpose email
addresses, can be permanently blocked after the first unwanted email.
Some email addresses are created with sub-domains that can be dropped at
the first abuse then replaced by new sub-domains.

> The difference between deposit/fetch and send/receive is profound. This
> is part of why I'm surprised that newsreaders and forums have fallen
> from favor amongst technical discussion groups. The "Logging into forums
> is a PITA" or "setting up another client is a PITA" arguments obviously
> won the debate -- though I think spam is a lot deeper into PITA
> territory than either at the present time.

The problems with forums are, in my personal opinion:-

(1) Spyware : logging every access with Google the USA's international
spying operation.

(2) Advertisements

(3) tiny text difficult to read

(4) Pop-up windows

(5) Layout not conducive to easy and quick reading.

(6) Having to visit a web site and then log-on if one wants to respond.

Conversely:-

Email Lists are quick, easy, immediate (certainly for my set-up),
require no extra effort.  Should the address get spammed, then its one
quick and simple change:-

(a) replacement DNS sub-domain

(b) update Mailman

(c) change email address in email client.



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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Stephen Harris
On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 07:41:09AM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 7/18/11 5:43 AM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> >>> RFC2821 says:
> >>>  -  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
> >>> host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
> >>> has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
> >>>
> >>> So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
> >>>
> >>> (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> >>> 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

> Can you point me to the section?  I don't see anything there about the 
> hostname 
> having to match an interface address or being allowed to reject if it isn't - 
> or 
> even any advice on how clustered hosts representing one mail domain should 
> represent themselves.

I think you think I'm disagreeing with you; I'm not.  I'm agreeing
with you.  The RFCs don't require the SMTP server to match the interface
IP address.

Note that RFC821 has been obsoleted and replaced with 2821.  Anyone
programming to 821 requirements is doing it wrong.  In fact 2821 has
been replaced with 5321

5321 says
 2.3.5 [...]
 The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST be either a primary
  host name (a domain name that resolves to an address RR) or, if
  the host has no name, an address literal, as described in
  Section 4.1.3 and discussed further in the EHLO discussion of
  Section 4.1.4.

I think that reference to 4.1.4 should really be 4.1.1.1...

4.1.1.1.  Extended HELLO (EHLO) or HELLO (HELO)

   These commands are used to identify the SMTP client to the SMTP
   server.  The argument clause contains the fully-qualified domain name
   of the SMTP client, if one is available.  In situations in which the
   SMTP client system does not have a meaningful domain name (e.g., when
   its address is dynamically allocated and no reverse mapping record is
   available), the client SHOULD send an address literal (see
   Section 4.1.3).

You only need to follow 5321 requirements which do _not_ require the
host to identify it as matching the specific interface; it merely needs
to identify as a valid A record (or address literal) for the client system.

There's nothing to say that the client system need be listening to port
25 (or be open to port 25 connections; firewalls for example), so anyone
performing HELO (or EHLO) address verification is pretty much limited
to the 2.3.5 requirement; that the passed name is _a_ valid name.  Which
is, AFAIK, all postfix does.

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/18/11 5:43 AM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 10:12:16PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
>> On 7/17/11 9:37 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
>>> On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
 likely
>>>
>>> RFC2821 says:
>>>  -  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
>>> host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
>>> has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
>>>
>>> So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
>>>
>>> (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
>>> 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).
>>
>> That's a long way for saying it MUST be the name of that particular host 
>> (which
>
> I addessed that in the parenthetical; 821 did require it; 2821 doesn't.

Can you point me to the section?  I don't see anything there about the hostname 
having to match an interface address or being allowed to reject if it isn't - 
or 
even any advice on how clustered hosts representing one mail domain should 
represent themselves.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com




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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-18 Thread Stephen Harris
On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 10:12:16PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> On 7/17/11 9:37 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> > On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> >> There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
> >> likely
> >
> > RFC2821 says:
> > -  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
> >host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
> >has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
> >
> > So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
> >
> > (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> > 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).
> 
> That's a long way for saying it MUST be the name of that particular host 
> (which 

I addessed that in the parenthetical; 821 did require it; 2821 doesn't.

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread 夜神 岩男
On Mon, 2011-07-18 at 04:04 +0100, Always Learning wrote:
> On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 22:37 -0400, Stephen Harris wrote:
> 
> > On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> > > There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
> > > likely 
> 
> > RFC2821 says:
> >-  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
> >   host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
> >   has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
> > 
> > So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
> > 
> > (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> > 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

> It seems spammers have successfully hacked Rupert Murdock's London Times
> newspaper and copied hundreds of thousands of email addresses or has a
> member of staff sold the email addresses to spammers to make some money?

Though it is certainly possible that a breach of some sort is
responsible for your spam, sniffing for email headers on high activity
parts of a network would be sufficient to collect a large number of
active email addresses to try (sniffing at Tor gateways could provide
interesting results, come to think of it). Another big winner for
mailbox collection is to not crack the information provider's site, but
to instead crack the email service provider and obtain a list of all
active accounts on that server (which would likely span multiple
domains).

Getting a hold of email accounts can happen any number of ways, most of
them uncontrollable by the account holder. Its a mailbox -- an open
destination for the world to send you stuff. You can't be too surprised
when the world does in fact send you stuff.

Traditional solutions include hiring a secretary to screen your mail
(today this would be setting up SpamAssassin) or ignoring all but
personal messages on verified stationary (today this would be digitally
signed mail) and instead going out to retreive your information at need
instead of having it sent to you at availability.

The diffrence between deposit/fetch and send/receive is profound. This
is part of why I'm surprised that newsreaders and forums have fallen
from favor amongst technical discussion groups. The "Logging into forums
is a PITA" or "setting up another client is a PITA" arguments obviously
won the debate -- though I think spam is a lot deeper into PITA
territory than either at the present time.

-Iwao


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/17/11 10:22 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>
>> Multiple interfaces, multiple IP addresses.  Sendmail isn't going to track 
>> which
>> interface it is sending on and adjust its greeting.
>
> Sendmail ?  Golly some of us have advanced to more advance systems like
> Exim ;-)

Does it vary it's HELO per interface?  How is it aware of upstream NATs?

> When I complained to Cable&  Wireless who operate mail sending from all
> the UK police forces, they adopted a seemingly unique solution by having
> the identical host name mapped to their different IP addresses. That
> solution solved it for me.

I'm somewhat shocked that they made such a change when there is no standard 
that 
requires it.

> It is not inbound (to them) that interests me but outbound. Every IP
> address can have a host name, so in theory there is no reason for the
> use of fake (non-existent or wrong) host names when sending emails.

IP addresses do not correspond to hosts.  They correspond to interfaces.  There 
is not a 1 to 1 correspondence between hosts and IPs.

> When a computer application is configured to send emails, part of the
> configuration process permits a host name to be chosen. In theory there
> seems no sensible reason for a fake host name to be used and that must,
> I would have thought, apply to multi-homed, clustered, load-balancers
> etc. There is absolutely nothing to stop several IP addresses having the
> identical host name.

If you like to waste IP addresses, you could add some just to give them names 
that would keep you happy.

>> Just because it doesn't match the IP doesn't make it fake.
>
> There are three reasons why a host name may not match the IP address it
> is operating on.
>
> (1) there is no A record so that host name does not exist;
>
> (2) there is no reverse name for the IP address;

There isn't much correspondence between 1 and 2 either.  The host name, the 
forward DNS entry and reverse DNS entry are all very different things, 
generally 
managed by different sets of people, even in cases where there is a one to one 
correspondence, which there often isn't.

> (3) the host name belongs to a different IP address;

Or many of them.

> Bogus host names are simply a symptom of a disorganised and neglected
> mail sending (and perhaps also receiving) system where no one takes any
> pride in doing an important job responsibly.

Or people following what the standard says and expecting others to do the same.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Emmanuel Noobadmin
On 7/18/11, Always Learning  wrote:
> Sorry if I seem thick but I am having problems understanding why, with
> the use of NAT, the HELO/EHLO and their external IP address can not
> match.  Also what influences does scaling have on the ability of sending
> mail servers (MTAs) to operate with host names that match their IP
> addresses ?

I'm trying to make sense of your suggestion and the objections raised,
since I do want to cut down on spam coming into my own server but at
the same time I don't want to cut off legit senders.

So far it seems to me that in for larger corps, this is what the
problem might be.

Say they have 3 different connections for redundancy, one serves
aaa.bbb.ccc.1x, another serve aaa.bbb.ccc.2x and the last .3x

And they have a bunch of services running on various servers, say 10
of them. each with their own hostname e.g. mail1.xyzcorp.com,
mail2.xyzcorp.com

For troubleshooting/tracing purposes, they use different HELO/EHLO
names for the servers and each mail server has their own IP range in
the aaa.bbb.ccc.xx net.

Since they have less outgoing connections than SMTP servers, their
router load balance the outgoing amongst the 3 connections.

So in this case, mail2.xyzcorp.com which HELO with aaa.bbb.ccc.11 may
get sent out via the aaa.bbb.ccc.20 or aaa.bbb.ccc.30 connection and
by your rules get blocked despite being legit.


At least that's how I'm understanding it but I don't admin any site
large enough to know if things are ever set up like that.
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/17/11 10:26 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>
> Sorry if I seem thick but I am having problems understanding why, with
> the use of NAT, the HELO/EHLO and their external IP address can not
> match.

I suppose it is not impossible if you force a 1 to 1 correspondence.

> Also what influences does scaling have on the ability of sending
> mail servers (MTAs) to operate with host names that match their IP
> addresses ?

NATs are often pools of addresses, often managed by different groups than the 
host services, and sometimes used in sets with different address mappings to 
allow load balancing and failover across multiple isp connections. If mail is 
your only service, you might give all of those addresses the reverse DNS name 
that matches your HELO name, but most places would probably just do what the 
standards require.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 22:12 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:

> On 7/17/11 9:37 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:

> > (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> > 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

> That's a long way for saying it MUST be the name of that particular host 
> (which 
> might be one of many in a cluster sharing a name) or that it MUST use the 
> name 
> of the interface that it happens to use for a particular connection, or that 
> its 
> own interface IP MUST be what connects to the target with no NAT involved. 
> Saying any of those things would make it very difficult for mail services to 
> scale.

Sorry if I seem thick but I am having problems understanding why, with
the use of NAT, the HELO/EHLO and their external IP address can not
match.  Also what influences does scaling have on the ability of sending
mail servers (MTAs) to operate with host names that match their IP
addresses ?

Thanks.

-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 21:57 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:

> Multiple interfaces, multiple IP addresses.  Sendmail isn't going to track 
> which 
> interface it is sending on and adjust its greeting.

Sendmail ?  Golly some of us have advanced to more advance systems like
Exim ;-)

When I complained to Cable & Wireless who operate mail sending from all
the UK police forces, they adopted a seemingly unique solution by having
the identical host name mapped to their different IP addresses. That
solution solved it for me.

> > Which type of 'cluster' were you thinking about ?

> There are any number of topologies that use multiple IP addresses for what 
> appears to be one name.  A load balancer might be involved, they may or may 
> not 
> accept on the same IP's as they use for outbound connections, they may or may 
> not know the outbound ip.

It is not inbound (to them) that interests me but outbound. Every IP
address can have a host name, so in theory there is no reason for the
use of fake (non-existent or wrong) host names when sending emails. 

When a computer application is configured to send emails, part of the
configuration process permits a host name to be chosen. In theory there
seems no sensible reason for a fake host name to be used and that must,
I would have thought, apply to multi-homed, clustered, load-balancers
etc. There is absolutely nothing to stop several IP addresses having the
identical host name.

> Just because it doesn't match the IP doesn't make it fake.

There are three reasons why a host name may not match the IP address it
is operating on.

(1) there is no A record so that host name does not exist;

(2) there is no reverse name for the IP address;

(3) the host name belongs to a different IP address;


> > Can you help me understand why bogus identities are necessary in these
> > circumstances ?

> You are the one defining it as bogus.  Consider a system where one or more of 
> it's routes to the internet go through nat routers or the nat functionality 
> of a 
> load balancer.  The program sending the mail won't even know the IP you see.

See my point above about configuring an application to send emails and
the choice there is to use a genuine host name which belongs to the IP
address that application is using to send emails.

Bogus host names are simply a symptom of a disorganised and neglected
mail sending (and perhaps also receiving) system where no one takes any
pride in doing an important job responsibly.


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/17/11 9:37 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
>> There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
>> likely
>
> RFC2821 says:
> -  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
>host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
>has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
>
> So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
>
> (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

That's a long way for saying it MUST be the name of that particular host (which 
might be one of many in a cluster sharing a name) or that it MUST use the name 
of the interface that it happens to use for a particular connection, or that 
its 
own interface IP MUST be what connects to the target with no NAT involved. 
Saying any of those things would make it very difficult for mail services to 
scale.

-- 
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lesmikes...@gmail.com'

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 22:37 -0400, Stephen Harris wrote:

> On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> > There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
> > likely 

> RFC2821 says:
>-  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
>   host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
>   has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.
> 
> So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.
> 
> (RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
> 2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

Thank you Stephen. This is most useful.

I have just received spam about an enlargement to part of the male body,
sent to a special email address I created solely to see a Murdock/News
International newspaper on-line:-


exclusivepreview.timesonline.co.uk@xx

It seems spammers have successfully hacked Rupert Murdock's London Times
newspaper and copied hundreds of thousands of email addresses or has a
member of staff sold the email addresses to spammers to make some money?

To combat the menace of SPAM lazy mail administrators must act
responsibly and end their inexcusable attitude that results in their
mail servers emulating spammers by using false identities in their
HELO/EHLO. The greater the distinction between a spammer's mail server
and a genuine mail server, the easier it becomes to block spam.



-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/17/11 9:18 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>
>>> Legitimate senders should not use fake, false, misleading credentials.
>
>> There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
>> likely
>> to work for multi-homed and/or clustered machines.
>
> Which type of 'multi-homing' were you thinking about ?
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multihoming
>
> * Single Link, Multiple IP address (Spaces)
> * Multiple Interfaces, Single IP address per interface
> * Multiple Links, Single IP address (Space)
> * Multiple Links, Multiple IP address (Spaces)

Multiple interfaces, multiple IP addresses.  Sendmail isn't going to track 
which 
interface it is sending on and adjust its greeting.

> Which type of 'cluster' were you thinking about ?
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_cluster
>
> * High-availability (HA) clusters
> * Load-balancing clusters
> * Compute clusters
>
> If any of these share the same IP address, they can share the same host
> name.

There are any number of topologies that use multiple IP addresses for what 
appears to be one name.  A load balancer might be involved, they may or may not 
accept on the same IP's as they use for outbound connections, they may or may 
not know the outbound ip.

> I am not well acquainted with either of the above two methods,
> multi-homed and clusters, but I can not understand why any of them
> should resort to using fake identities when sending-out emails.

Just because it doesn't match the IP doesn't make it fake.

> Can you help me understand why bogus identities are necessary in these
> circumstances ?

You are the one defining it as bogus.  Consider a system where one or more of 
it's routes to the internet go through nat routers or the nat functionality of 
a 
load balancer.  The program sending the mail won't even know the IP you see.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Stephen Harris
On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 09:07:38PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
> There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
> likely 

RFC2821 says:
   -  The domain name given in the EHLO command MUST BE either a primary
  host name (a domain name that resolves to an A RR) or, if the host
  has no name, an address literal as described in section 4.1.1.1.

So, pretty much, HELO or EHLO greeting _must_ match to an IP.

(RFC821 actually wanted the HELO to match the connecting host, but
2821 just says it must be an A record or an address literal).

-- 

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 21:07 -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:

> On 7/17/11 4:48 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> >
> > Legitimate senders should not use fake, false, misleading credentials.

> There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't 
> likely 
> to work for multi-homed and/or clustered machines.

Which type of 'multi-homing' were you thinking about ?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multihoming

* Single Link, Multiple IP address (Spaces)
* Multiple Interfaces, Single IP address per interface
* Multiple Links, Single IP address (Space)
* Multiple Links, Multiple IP address (Spaces)

Which type of 'cluster' were you thinking about ?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_cluster

* High-availability (HA) clusters
* Load-balancing clusters
* Compute clusters

If any of these share the same IP address, they can share the same host
name.

I am not well acquainted with either of the above two methods,
multi-homed and clusters, but I can not understand why any of them
should resort to using fake identities when sending-out emails. 

Can you help me understand why bogus identities are necessary in these
circumstances ?

Thank you.

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Paul.
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Les Mikesell
On 7/17/11 4:48 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>
> If the 'greeting name' (HELO/EHLO) does not resolve to the IP address
> used by the sending server, then the mail is not accepted.

That's ummm, kind of random. There's no reason to expect this.

>> Someone who does not want to receive mail from legitimate senders can
>> just switch off his MTA ;-)
>
> Legitimate senders should not use fake, false, misleading credentials.

There is no requirement for the greeting name to match any IP, and isn't likely 
to work for multi-homed and/or clustered machines.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 23:52 +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
> Always Learning wrote:
> > Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?
> > 
> 
> Mine uses proper name, but then again I am one of the few in my country 
> to offer POP3 on SSL port 465. And I am small local WISP.
> 
> And when I say *few*, I mean I do not actually *know* of any mail server 
> in Serbia offering this.

Congratulations.  

I fear with the introduction of IP6, it may be more difficult to
separate spammers from non-spammers using fake IDs.


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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Always Learning wrote:
> Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?
> 

Mine uses proper name, but then again I am one of the few in my country 
to offer POP3 on SSL port 465. And I am small local WISP.

And when I say *few*, I mean I do not actually *know* of any mail server 
in Serbia offering this.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Stephen Harris
On Sun, Jul 17, 2011 at 11:36:49PM +0200, Patrick Lists wrote:
> On 07/17/2011 11:24 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> > *almost* correct. In Linux, like Unix and the pre-Microsoft days,
> > uppercase letters have a different numerical value to lowercase letters.
> >
> > Uppercase 'COM' is definitely not the same as lowercase 'com'.
> 
> Please correct me if I am wrong but afaik upper-/lowercase does not 
> matter in DNS. Also, I am not aware of e.g. Postfix actually rejecting 
> (with reject_unknown_client_hostname) a FQDN with capitals when a FQDN 
> in lowercase was expected.

Postfix HELO verification simply does the relevant DNS lookups; if they
succeed then the HELO is OK.

Postfix IP verification does the IP rDNS lookup, then a forward lookup
of the result; if the result set includes the original IP then it
succeeds.

Case doesn't matter unless the underlying DNS libraries somehow break
on case.  Which they shouldn't :-)

In the example given earlier:

   HELO / EHLO: smtpe1.intersmtp.com
   HELO IP: 62.239.224.89
   MX IP:   62.239.224.234
   MX DNS A record: smtp61.intersmtp.com

The HELO name successfully resolves to 62.239.224.89, so passes.

Now the source IP address isn't given but if it was 62.239.224.89 then
postfix would have done
  62.239.224.89 -> smtpe1.intersmtp.COM.
and then
  smtpe1.intersmtp.COM. -> 62.239.224.89
Since the final IP address matches the source IP address then the connecting
IP address check would also have passed.

You'll note the MX IP and A records aren't actually involved, in this
case!

After 5+ years of running these checks myself, I finally got fed up with
all the stupid companies who had broken DNS (including banks and ISPs
and Fortune 500 companies - my "white list" made 99 entries!) that
I eventually turned it off and just use the Zen RBL.  It lets through
spam that the stricter checks would reject, but it's good enough.

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 23:36 +0200, Patrick Lists wrote:

> On 07/17/2011 11:24 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> > Uppercase 'COM' is definitely not the same as lowercase 'com'.
> 
> Please correct me if I am wrong but afaik upper-/lowercase does not 
> matter in DNS. Also, I am not aware of e.g. Postfix actually rejecting 
> (with reject_unknown_client_hostname) a FQDN with capitals when a FQDN 
> in lowercase was expected.

Nee hoor. You are correct. kopie, kopie :-)


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Devin Reade wrote:
> Ljubomir Ljubojevic  wrote:
> 
>> I use it too. Reverse-DNS check is best SPAM repellent there is. Only 
>> mail from properly set mail servers is accepted.
> 
> That's fine if your check is that a reverse DNS entry exists,
> or that the HELO/ELHO exists in forward DNS or, if your MTA is
> smart enough, it does a reverse-forward* check, but if
> you only check that the HELO/ELHO matches the reverse entry
> then you're blocking a bunch of valid mailers because there is
> no specification requirement that those two match (and they don't
> in the general case).
> 
> (*) reverse-forward here means do a reverse lookup on the connecting
> IP, then doing a forward lookup on the result, and then ensure that
> original IP is one of the 'A' records resolved from the forward 
> lookup.
> 
> Devin

I only check reverse DNS entry for FQDN, I think HELO/EHLO is not checked.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 23:33 +0200, Alexander Dalloz wrote:

> >> Organisation:British Telecommunications, EU
> >> HELO / EHLO: smtpe1.intersmtp.com
> >> HELO IP: 62.239.224.89
> >> MX IP:   62.239.224.234
> >> MX DNS A record: smtp61.intersmtp.com

> > BUT the IP address used for the mail server was, as the list shows,
> > 62.239.224.234 which, at the time, had a host name of
> > smtp61.intersmtp.com

> What do you mean by that? Was the connecting mailserver the one with IP
> 62.239.224.234? If you mean that the mailserver should have been the one
> listed as MX, you are simply wrong and you do not know what an MX is.

In the list there is limited space for explanations. There is no
abbreviation for 'receiving MTA' so I used 'MX'. I have changed it to
ACTUAL. Hope that helps. (You will probably need to refresh/reload the
web page)


> In DNS as well in mail addresses in the public zone the letter case does
> not matter.

I know. It was a joke about the COM and com :-)

> No, though there is no RFC which states that the HELO/EHLO name must be
> eqal to any MX record. In your example the greeting name resolves fine
> and is ok in this regard.

If the 'greeting name' (HELO/EHLO) does not resolve to the IP address
used by the sending server, then the mail is not accepted.

> Someone who does not want to receive mail from legitimate senders can
> just switch off his MTA ;-)

Legitimate senders should not use fake, false, misleading credentials.

Incidentally your own ISP is one of the worse users in England of 'fake'
HELO/EHLO names.


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Patrick Lists
On 07/17/2011 11:24 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> *almost* correct. In Linux, like Unix and the pre-Microsoft days,
> uppercase letters have a different numerical value to lowercase letters.
>
> Uppercase 'COM' is definitely not the same as lowercase 'com'.

Please correct me if I am wrong but afaik upper-/lowercase does not 
matter in DNS. Also, I am not aware of e.g. Postfix actually rejecting 
(with reject_unknown_client_hostname) a FQDN with capitals when a FQDN 
in lowercase was expected.

Regards,
Patrick
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Alexander Dalloz
Am 17.07.2011 23:24, schrieb Always Learning:
> 
> On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 23:15 +0200, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
> 
> 
>> The 2nd one in your list:
>>
>> Organisation:British Telecommunications, EU
>> HELO / EHLO: smtpe1.intersmtp.com
>> HELO IP: 62.239.224.89
>> MX IP:   62.239.224.234
>> MX DNS A record: smtp61.intersmtp.com
>>
>> Here smtpe1.intersmtp.com resolves properly forward and reverse, if that
>> is what counts for you.
> 
> BUT the IP address used for the mail server was, as the list shows,
> 62.239.224.234 which, at the time, had a host name of
> smtp61.intersmtp.com

What do you mean by that? Was the connecting mailserver the one with IP
62.239.224.234? If you mean that the mailserver should have been the one
listed as MX, you are simply wrong and you do not know what an MX is.

> smtpe1.intersmtp.com still does NOT properly resolve.
> 
> host smtpe1.intersmtp.com
> smtpe1.intersmtp.com has address 62.239.224.89
> 
> host 62.239.224.89
> 89.224.239.62.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer smtpe1.intersmtp.COM.
> 
> *almost* correct. In Linux, like Unix and the pre-Microsoft days,
> uppercase letters have a different numerical value to lowercase letters.
> 
> Uppercase 'COM' is definitely not the same as lowercase 'com'.

In DNS as well in mail addresses in the public zone the letter case does
not matter.

> No wonder some call 'BT' Balls-up Telecoms.
> 
> Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?

No, though there is no RFC which states that the HELO/EHLO name must be
eqal to any MX record. In your example the greeting name resolves fine
and is ok in this regard.

Someone who does not want to receive mail from legitimate senders can
just switch off his MTA ;-)

Alexander


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 23:15 +0200, Alexander Dalloz wrote:


> The 2nd one in your list:
> 
> Organisation:British Telecommunications, EU
> HELO / EHLO: smtpe1.intersmtp.com
> HELO IP: 62.239.224.89
> MX IP:   62.239.224.234
> MX DNS A record: smtp61.intersmtp.com
> 
> Here smtpe1.intersmtp.com resolves properly forward and reverse, if that
> is what counts for you.

BUT the IP address used for the mail server was, as the list shows,
62.239.224.234 which, at the time, had a host name of
smtp61.intersmtp.com

smtpe1.intersmtp.com still does NOT properly resolve.

host smtpe1.intersmtp.com
smtpe1.intersmtp.com has address 62.239.224.89

host 62.239.224.89
89.224.239.62.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer smtpe1.intersmtp.COM.

*almost* correct. In Linux, like Unix and the pre-Microsoft days,
uppercase letters have a different numerical value to lowercase letters.

Uppercase 'COM' is definitely not the same as lowercase 'com'.

No wonder some call 'BT' Balls-up Telecoms.

Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?

-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Alexander Dalloz
Am 17.07.2011 22:30, schrieb Always Learning:

> Here a a few examples:   http://sys.u226.com/t21/t21p003.php

Just to understand you, could you please explain one of your "examples"?

The 2nd one in your list:

Organisation:British Telecommunications, EU
HELO / EHLO: smtpe1.intersmtp.com
HELO IP: 62.239.224.89
MX IP:   62.239.224.234
MX DNS A record: smtp61.intersmtp.com

Here smtpe1.intersmtp.com resolves properly forward and reverse, if that
is what counts for you.

Alexander
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Always Learning

On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 11:06 -0600, Devin Reade wrote:

> That's fine if your check is that a reverse DNS entry exists,
> or that the HELO/ELHO exists in forward DNS or, if your MTA is
> smart enough, it does a reverse-forward* check, but if
> you only check that the HELO/ELHO matches the reverse entry
> then you're blocking a bunch of valid mailers because there is
> no specification requirement that those two match (and they don't
> in the general case).

What is the point of some super stupid over-paid Computer Professional
(usually a Windoze lover) configuring his or her (although women are
more careful than men) mail server to send emails with false
credentials ?

Example: HELO/EHLO my identity is stupid.example.com

when that server is operating on IP address xxx.yyy.zzz.aaa

and stupid.example.com has a DNS 'A' record for IP address
bbb.eee.sss.ttt ?

Incidentally the mail server's IP address xxx.yyy.zzz.aaa has a host
name of ridiculous.example.com

> you're blocking a bunch of valid mailers

What is 'valid' in this situation ?

> there is no specification requirement that those two match
> (and they don't in the general case).

When you telephone someone from your office, do you usually give a false
name and contact telephone number ?  No, of course you do not. Why
tolerate false details from a source who is often a spammer.

Mail Admins should unite against spammers not deliberately emulate them.

Here a a few examples:   http://sys.u226.com/t21/t21p003.php


-- 
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Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Devin Reade
Ljubomir Ljubojevic  wrote:

> I use it too. Reverse-DNS check is best SPAM repellent there is. Only 
> mail from properly set mail servers is accepted.

That's fine if your check is that a reverse DNS entry exists,
or that the HELO/ELHO exists in forward DNS or, if your MTA is
smart enough, it does a reverse-forward* check, but if
you only check that the HELO/ELHO matches the reverse entry
then you're blocking a bunch of valid mailers because there is
no specification requirement that those two match (and they don't
in the general case).

(*) reverse-forward here means do a reverse lookup on the connecting
IP, then doing a forward lookup on the result, and then ensure that
original IP is one of the 'A' records resolved from the forward 
lookup.

Devin
-- 
I don't suffer from insanity.  I enjoy every minute of it. 

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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-17 Thread Ljubomir Ljubojevic
Always Learning wrote:
> On Sat, 2011-07-16 at 20:06 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
> 
>> On 7/16/2011 6:50 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>>>
>>> If there was an automatic ban on List mail containing HTML parts, it is
>>> likely the latest crap would not be distributed to everyone.
>>>
>>> A possible test of the Content-Type: header for
>>>
>>>  multipart/mixed;
>>>
>>> or
>>>
>>>  text/html;
>>>
>>>
>>> might stop the spam.
> 
> 
>> you mean like the default settings of Mailman list software that the 
>> CentOS list "doesn't" run on? I have five lists running on one of my 
>> CentOS servers and crap like that doesn't ever make it to the list.
> 
> It is the method I use with Exim to block unwanted HTML emails.
> 
> I also do not accept external mail if the HELO/EHLO is not identical to
> the host name used by the sending server. Its a marvellous method of
> removing lots of spam. Unfortunately some large organisations (i.e.
> Ebay, British Telecommunications (BT) and others) are so utterly
> incompetent they fail - so their emails get rejected. If they want to
> send us emails, they have to obey our rules.
> 
> 
I use it too. Reverse-DNS check is best SPAM repellent there is. Only 
mail from properly set mail servers is accepted.

Ljubomir
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread Always Learning

On Sat, 2011-07-16 at 20:06 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:

> On 7/16/2011 6:50 PM, Always Learning wrote:
> >
> >
> > If there was an automatic ban on List mail containing HTML parts, it is
> > likely the latest crap would not be distributed to everyone.
> >
> > A possible test of the Content-Type: header for
> >
> >  multipart/mixed;
> >
> > or
> >
> >  text/html;
> >
> >
> > might stop the spam.


> you mean like the default settings of Mailman list software that the 
> CentOS list "doesn't" run on? I have five lists running on one of my 
> CentOS servers and crap like that doesn't ever make it to the list.

It is the method I use with Exim to block unwanted HTML emails.

I also do not accept external mail if the HELO/EHLO is not identical to
the host name used by the sending server. Its a marvellous method of
removing lots of spam. Unfortunately some large organisations (i.e.
Ebay, British Telecommunications (BT) and others) are so utterly
incompetent they fail - so their emails get rejected. If they want to
send us emails, they have to obey our rules.


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread John R. Dennison
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 08:40:37PM -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
> 
> Oops... my bad. here I set with egg on my face. However they did used to 
> use a different mailing list package.

They did?




John

-- 
The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price,
peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love of soft
living, and the get-rich-quick theory of life.

-- Teddy Roosevelt


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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread Mark Weaver
On 7/16/2011 8:33 PM, KevinO wrote:
> On 07/16/2011 05:06 PM, Mark Weaver wrote:
>> you mean like the default settings of Mailman list software that the
>> CentOS list "doesn't" run on? I have five lists running on one of my
>> CentOS servers and crap like that doesn't ever make it to the list.
>>
> Mark take a careful look at the footers of each email.
>

Oops... my bad. here I set with egg on my face. However they did used to 
use a different mailing list package.

-- 
Mark Weaver
Computer Information Systems & Services, Inc.
mwea...@compinfosystems.com
(717) 512-9718
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread KevinO
On 07/16/2011 05:06 PM, Mark Weaver wrote:
> you mean like the default settings of Mailman list software that the 
> CentOS list "doesn't" run on? I have five lists running on one of my 
> CentOS servers and crap like that doesn't ever make it to the list.
> 
Mark take a careful look at the footers of each email.

-- 
KevinO
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread Mark Weaver
On 7/16/2011 6:50 PM, Always Learning wrote:
>
>
> If there was an automatic ban on List mail containing HTML parts, it is
> likely the latest crap would not be distributed to everyone.
>
> A possible test of the Content-Type: header for
>
>  multipart/mixed;
>
> or
>
>  text/html;
>
>
> might stop the spam.
>
>

you mean like the default settings of Mailman list software that the 
CentOS list "doesn't" run on? I have five lists running on one of my 
CentOS servers and crap like that doesn't ever make it to the list.

-- 
Mark Weaver
Computer Information Systems & Services, Inc.
mwea...@compinfosystems.com
(717) 512-9718
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Re: [CentOS] SPAM on the List

2011-07-16 Thread Always Learning


If there was an automatic ban on List mail containing HTML parts, it is
likely the latest crap would not be distributed to everyone.

A possible test of the Content-Type: header for

multipart/mixed;

or

text/html;


might stop the spam.


-- 
With best regards,

Paul.
England,
EU.


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