Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-06 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 5 Dec 2013 14:37:29 -0500:

 And here's two thoughts that just struck me: first, they have no way to
 apply to be whitelisted.

I think there are ways, they do maintain a whitelist. Maybe Hostmonster is 
just not good enough to get on it. Did you consider that?
 
 And second, NIXSpam is a free service, right? Um, as someone said
 recently, you get what you pay for.

If you pay you want to get whitelisted? Did you really want to say that?

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-06 Thread Kai Schaetzl
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 5 Dec 2013 16:47:37 -0500:

 I keep hoping, perhaps foolishly, that others who get hit with this will
 add their voice, and that the list might go to using some other source to
 block spam.

Oh, yeah, until the day where that list adds Hostmonster as well and 
suddenly is the devil. Come on, don't you see that you are acting pretty 
irrational?

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-06 Thread m . roth
Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 m.r...@5-cent.us wrote on Thu, 5 Dec 2013 14:37:29 -0500:

 And here's two thoughts that just struck me: first, they have no way to
 apply to be whitelisted.

 I think there are ways, they do maintain a whitelist. Maybe Hostmonster is
 just not good enough to get on it. Did you consider that?

 And second, NIXSpam is a free service, right? Um, as someone said
 recently, you get what you pay for.

 If you pay you want to get whitelisted? Did you really want to say that?

Huh? No, the CentOS list is choosing to use NIXSpam. The list doesn't pay
for it. On the other hand, NIXSpam offers no way to apply to be
whitelisted by them, pay or not.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-06 Thread Kai Schaetzl
The list pays very well. It's just that your hosting provider is 
regularly or irregularly on it. That's the only reason you think it 
doesn't pay. Not a good reason. It pays for everybody else on this 
list except you. Consider that. It may even pay for you, just that you 
don't notice (less spam). You only notice if it blocks you.

Let's stop this discussion. We all know you don't like getting blocked. I 
won't follow up any longer.

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Kai Schaetzl
Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been 
using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

I, too, had an issue with the list lately and contacted the maintainer of 
the project who gave me a good explanation of why Facebook servers may be 
listed on it (they don't stop sending to discontinued users that have been 
bouncing for at least half a year).

If the mailserver of your provider sends spam it's absolutely fine to put 
it on the list. Or, in other words, that's what the list is for in the 
first place. If Hostmonster feels that there is only few spam running over 
their servers and they cannot get this down to zero (which is reasonable) 
then they can contact them and ask to be put on the whitelist.

I don't know what you mean by My hosting provider works with those jerks 
at manitu. Does your hosting provider use them to block you? Or does he 
work with them to resolve the issue?

 selfip.biz

I don't see the relevance. You should provide the URL, so one could 
actually check the headers of the mail (it doesn't list the content) and 
decide if it could have been spam. If it indeed was spam (either by 
content or by definition) I don't see what's wrong with putting it on the 
list according to list policy.
selfip.biz is actually a domain they use for their spamtraps. So, this 
mail was sent to a spamtrap. One could argue whether a mailserver should 
send to hostname.selfip.biz at all as it may be not be a real mailserver 
(but you don't know). But that's a different story.

Most of the time RBLs are fine as long as people don't get on them 
themselves :-)

Kai


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Ned Slider
On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

 I, too, had an issue with the list lately and contacted the maintainer of
 the project who gave me a good explanation of why Facebook servers may be
 listed on it (they don't stop sending to discontinued users that have been
 bouncing for at least half a year).

 If the mailserver of your provider sends spam it's absolutely fine to put
 it on the list. Or, in other words, that's what the list is for in the
 first place. If Hostmonster feels that there is only few spam running over
 their servers and they cannot get this down to zero (which is reasonable)
 then they can contact them and ask to be put on the whitelist.

 I don't know what you mean by My hosting provider works with those jerks
 at manitu. Does your hosting provider use them to block you? Or does he
 work with them to resolve the issue?

 selfip.biz

 I don't see the relevance. You should provide the URL, so one could
 actually check the headers of the mail (it doesn't list the content) and
 decide if it could have been spam. If it indeed was spam (either by
 content or by definition) I don't see what's wrong with putting it on the
 list according to list policy.
 selfip.biz is actually a domain they use for their spamtraps. So, this
 mail was sent to a spamtrap. One could argue whether a mailserver should
 send to hostname.selfip.biz at all as it may be not be a real mailserver
 (but you don't know). But that's a different story.

 Most of the time RBLs are fine as long as people don't get on them
 themselves :-)

 Kai


The problem here is that Mark is using a shared hostmonster smtp server 
to relay outbound mail, and from time to time they relay spam and get 
blacklisted for it. We've experienced a similar thing from time to time 
where we have a server hosted with hostmonster that sends out 
notification emails which are relayed via shared hostmonster mail 
servers, and occasionally we get bounce notifications where 
hostmonster's outbound relays are blacklisted (I have mostly noticed 
them being blacklisted by SpamCop).

If it's important I'd suggest not using shared resources for your 
outbound mail. If you use a dedicated server (with it's own IP) for 
outbound mail you will know it's clean and hopefully not get 
blacklisted. You get what you pay for.

Simple fact in the second decade of the 21st century is their server, 
their rules. If someone wants to block you they can and they will. If 
your outbound server is spamming me I'd block you too. I don't care how 
many other people might be using it. It's not difficult to prevent 
outgoing spam, be responsible or be blocked. My server, my rules.

As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's 
attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either 
get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been 
going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't care 
(if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all, 
it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Nux!
On 05.12.2013 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've 
 been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

RBLs should at most be used in Spamassassin to increase the score, 
otherwise you risk losing legit email!

And it does suck to be on them, way too many people run way too many 
lists. I still have a /21 listed in SORBS because once upon a time it 
used to be part of an ISP's /18 dynamic range. Obviously I can't use 
those IPs for customers (hosting) since their emails will almost always 
get marked. Sorbs' support does not exist, of course. Thank fsck that 
was not our only range, we would've gone bankrupt.

-- 
Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!

Nux!
www.nux.ro
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

 I, too, had an issue with the list lately and contacted the maintainer
 of the project who gave me a good explanation of why Facebook servers may
 be listed on it (they don't stop sending to discontinued users that have
 been bouncing for at least half a year).

 If the mailserver of your provider sends spam it's absolutely fine to
 put it on the list. Or, in other words, that's what the list is for in the
 first place. If Hostmonster feels that there is only few spam running
 over their servers and they cannot get this down to zero (which is
 reasonable) then they can contact them and ask to be put on the whitelist.

 I don't know what you mean by My hosting provider works with those
 jerks at manitu. Does your hosting provider use them to block you? Or
does he
 work with them to resolve the issue?

They do work with them, and they don't like manitu, either. Btw, I was
told a few months ago that there's some fee involved for removing a
mailhost.

 selfip.biz

 I don't see the relevance. You should provide the URL, so one could
 actually check the headers of the mail (it doesn't list the content) and
 decide if it could have been spam. If it indeed was spam (either by
 content or by definition) I don't see what's wrong with putting it on
 the list according to list policy.

Right, but given what whois reports, for all I know, it's somebody with a
home business that can't/won't even afford their own static IP reporting
this. This suggests that it could be one person getting a bunch of spam,
and blocking everyone else by reporting it a few times.

 selfip.biz is actually a domain they use for their spamtraps. So, this

Ok, thanks for that info.
snip
 The problem here is that Mark is using a shared hostmonster smtp server
 to relay outbound mail, and from time to time they relay spam and get
 blacklisted for it. We've experienced a similar thing from time to time
 where we have a server hosted with hostmonster that sends out
 notification emails which are relayed via shared hostmonster mail
 servers, and occasionally we get bounce notifications where
 hostmonster's outbound relays are blacklisted (I have mostly noticed
 them being blacklisted by SpamCop).

Perfect description.

 If it's important I'd suggest not using shared resources for your
 outbound mail. If you use a dedicated server (with it's own IP) for
 outbound mail you will know it's clean and hopefully not get
 blacklisted. You get what you pay for.

Right, and since I'm NOT running a business - I broke down and got the
domain when I was about to relocate for the THIRD TIME in  10 years
halfway across the US, so that I could tell everyone an email address that
wouldn't change again. I dunno that they have a rate that includes a
non-shared mailserver without going to business rates, 10-20 times what
I'm paying now.
snip
 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's

No, this is a dozen or two dozen times over the last four years, or more.

 attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either
 get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been
 going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't care
 (if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all,
 it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.

I assume you missed the last time I gave a long rant. Allow me to repeat
the relevant part: about a dozen years ago, cogeco, in Canada, was
blocking me from emailing an old friend, and even with him complaining,
this went on and off and on till he simply stopped using them, and used
his professional account.

The reason was that they were blocking roadrunner Chicago. Roadrunner, at
the time, provided a major portion of the city of Chicago with 'Net access
- that's hundreds of thousands of home and businesses, and they'd gobbled
up most of the independent ISPs. We really didn't have much in the way of
other options. What could anyone in the city do?

So instead of blocking domains, they block hosting providers' mailservers.
18 and 20 years ago, when there were lots of independent ISPs, it could
make sense. In these days with most of them eaten, it does *not*.

 mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.
snip
 Simple fact in the second decade of the 21st century is their server,
 their rules. If someone wants to block you they can and they will. If
 your outbound server is spamming me I'd block you too. I don't care how
 many other people might be using it. It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam, be responsible or be blocked. My server, my rules.

 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's
 attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either
 get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been
 going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't care
 (if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all,
 it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.

And here's two thoughts that just struck me: first, they have no way to
apply to be whitelisted.

And second, NIXSpam is a free service, right? Um, as someone said
recently, you get what you pay for.

mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Ned Slider
On 05/12/13 19:37, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.
 snip
 Simple fact in the second decade of the 21st century is their server,
 their rules. If someone wants to block you they can and they will. If
 your outbound server is spamming me I'd block you too. I don't care how
 many other people might be using it. It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam, be responsible or be blocked. My server, my rules.

 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's
 attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either
 get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been
 going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't care
 (if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all,
 it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.

 And here's two thoughts that just struck me: first, they have no way to
 apply to be whitelisted.

 And second, NIXSpam is a free service, right? Um, as someone said
 recently, you get what you pay for.

  mark

As Kai pointed out they are actually a very effective blacklist, 
irrespective of cost.

I don't understand why you persist with this. You say you've been hit 
with this a dozen or two dozen times now. You'd think by now you would 
have figured it out? You are collateral damage. No one cares. 
Hostmonster don't care - they are more than happy to keep taking your 
money each month. If they cared it wouldn't be happening time and time 
and time again. Manitu don't care - hostmonster spam their servers so 
get blacklisted. That's what they do.

YOU are the only person that cares because you are being directly 
impacted by it. If I were you I wouldn't stand for it. I'd go elsewhere. 
I probably would have moved after the second time it happened. If you 
are still with them after multiple instances you only have yourself to 
blame. Stop whinging to this list about it and do something about it - 
either move to another (clean) provider or provision yourself a mail 
server in clean IP space that you don't share with spammers.


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 1:04 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:

 It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam,

The rest of the world begs to differ...  If it were easy to stop spam
there wouldn't be any spam.

 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's
 attention.

No, it is just annoying, and as you can see, the problem continues.

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 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Ned Slider
On 05/12/13 19:25, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've been
 using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

 I, too, had an issue with the list lately and contacted the maintainer
 of the project who gave me a good explanation of why Facebook servers may
 be listed on it (they don't stop sending to discontinued users that have
 been bouncing for at least half a year).

 If the mailserver of your provider sends spam it's absolutely fine to
 put it on the list. Or, in other words, that's what the list is for in the
 first place. If Hostmonster feels that there is only few spam running
 over their servers and they cannot get this down to zero (which is
 reasonable) then they can contact them and ask to be put on the whitelist.

 I don't know what you mean by My hosting provider works with those
 jerks at manitu. Does your hosting provider use them to block you? Or
 does he
 work with them to resolve the issue?

 They do work with them, and they don't like manitu, either. Btw, I was
 told a few months ago that there's some fee involved for removing a
 mailhost.

 selfip.biz

 I don't see the relevance. You should provide the URL, so one could
 actually check the headers of the mail (it doesn't list the content) and
 decide if it could have been spam. If it indeed was spam (either by
 content or by definition) I don't see what's wrong with putting it on
 the list according to list policy.

 Right, but given what whois reports, for all I know, it's somebody with a
 home business that can't/won't even afford their own static IP reporting
 this. This suggests that it could be one person getting a bunch of spam,
 and blocking everyone else by reporting it a few times.

 selfip.biz is actually a domain they use for their spamtraps. So, this

 Ok, thanks for that info.
 snip
 The problem here is that Mark is using a shared hostmonster smtp server
 to relay outbound mail, and from time to time they relay spam and get
 blacklisted for it. We've experienced a similar thing from time to time
 where we have a server hosted with hostmonster that sends out
 notification emails which are relayed via shared hostmonster mail
 servers, and occasionally we get bounce notifications where
 hostmonster's outbound relays are blacklisted (I have mostly noticed
 them being blacklisted by SpamCop).

 Perfect description.

 If it's important I'd suggest not using shared resources for your
 outbound mail. If you use a dedicated server (with it's own IP) for
 outbound mail you will know it's clean and hopefully not get
 blacklisted. You get what you pay for.

 Right, and since I'm NOT running a business - I broke down and got the
 domain when I was about to relocate for the THIRD TIME in  10 years
 halfway across the US, so that I could tell everyone an email address that
 wouldn't change again. I dunno that they have a rate that includes a
 non-shared mailserver without going to business rates, 10-20 times what
 I'm paying now.
 snip
 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's

 No, this is a dozen or two dozen times over the last four years, or more.

 attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either
 get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been
 going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't care
 (if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all,
 it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.

 I assume you missed the last time I gave a long rant. Allow me to repeat
 the relevant part: about a dozen years ago, cogeco, in Canada, was
 blocking me from emailing an old friend, and even with him complaining,
 this went on and off and on till he simply stopped using them, and used
 his professional account.

 The reason was that they were blocking roadrunner Chicago. Roadrunner, at
 the time, provided a major portion of the city of Chicago with 'Net access
 - that's hundreds of thousands of home and businesses, and they'd gobbled
 up most of the independent ISPs. We really didn't have much in the way of
 other options. What could anyone in the city do?

 So instead of blocking domains, they block hosting providers' mailservers.
 18 and 20 years ago, when there were lots of independent ISPs, it could
 make sense. In these days with most of them eaten, it does *not*.



You are still completely missing the point. It doesn't matter what YOU 
think makes sense. It's totally irrelevant. I run a mail server. My 
server, my rules. If I want to use a black list that's my choice. You 
get blocked, tough, you are collateral damage. It doesn't matter what 
you think - it doesn't even matter if you are right (or wrong, or whatever).




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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 1:58 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:

  You are collateral damage. No one cares.

It's not that no one else cares.  It is just that everyone else has
given up the fight and been forced to move to large mail hubs that can
afford to keep themselves whitelisted.  Marc is just more stubborn
than most...

-- 
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 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 19:37, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've
 been using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam
ratio.
 snip
 Simple fact in the second decade of the 21st century is their server,
 their rules. If someone wants to block you they can and they will. If
 your outbound server is spamming me I'd block you too. I don't care how
 many other people might be using it. It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam, be responsible or be blocked. My server, my rules.

 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's
 attention. As it's got your attention twice now, I'd suggest you either
 get used to it or move your outbound mail to a clean host. It's been
 going on long enough now that it's pretty obvious hostmonster don't
 care
 (if it's on my radar, it must have caught their attention - after all,
 it's their servers). They are happy to keep taking your money.

 And here's two thoughts that just struck me: first, they have no way to
 apply to be whitelisted.

 And second, NIXSpam is a free service, right? Um, as someone said
 recently, you get what you pay for.

 As Kai pointed out they are actually a very effective blacklist,
 irrespective of cost.

I do *not* think it is. I strongly disagree. I've given two examples,
years apart, of two seperate large ISPs being blocked.

 I don't understand why you persist with this. You say you've been hit

Because I'd like to see the CentOS list use something other than NIXSpam.

 with this a dozen or two dozen times now. You'd think by now you would
 have figured it out? You are collateral damage. No one cares.
 Hostmonster don't care - they are more than happy to keep taking your

Actually, they do. I've spoken to them, to tier 2 support, and it does
matter to them, and they do keep working at getting unblocked. But as long
as there's users who get their home or work PC infected, incidents will
happen.

And I do *NOT* believe it's just me. It's obvious on the face of it that
in both instances I've given examples of, that many other people who use
the same services get hit. If I thought it was *only* me, I'd have been
annoyed, but gone to another hosting provider. But a) are you going to
claim that, no matter who I go to, unless I pay $60 or $100 or more a
month, that it's not going to happen again with another provider? And b)
why should I pay that much more for problems on one mailing list, of the
half a dozen or more that I'm on?

 money each month. If they cared it wouldn't be happening time and time
 and time again. Manitu don't care - hostmonster spam their servers so
 get blacklisted. That's what they do.

And the example I gave, from a dozen years ago, when there were more
mailing lists - did the many residents of the city of Chicago deserver
being blacklisted?

 YOU are the only person that cares because you are being directly
 impacted by it. If I were you I wouldn't stand for it. I'd go elsewhere.
 I probably would have moved after the second time it happened. If you
 are still with them after multiple instances you only have yourself to
 blame. Stop whinging to this list about it and do something about it -
 either move to another (clean) provider or provision yourself a mail
 server in clean IP space that you don't share with spammers.

So, you're offering to pay the difference between the, what is it, $6/mo
that I pay, and a commercial rate?

mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 2:02 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:

 You are still completely missing the point. It doesn't matter what YOU
 think makes sense.

No, I think that _is_ his point.

 It's totally irrelevant. I run a mail server. My
 server, my rules.

Yes, running a mail server without caring if any mail is actually
delivered seems somehow wrong.

-- 
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 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
Nux! wrote:
 On 05.12.2013 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've
 been using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam ratio.

 RBLs should at most be used in Spamassassin to increase the score,
 otherwise you risk losing legit email!

 And it does suck to be on them, way too many people run way too many
 lists. I still have a /21 listed in SORBS because once upon a time it
 used to be part of an ISP's /18 dynamic range. Obviously I can't use
 those IPs for customers (hosting) since their emails will almost always
 get marked. Sorbs' support does not exist, of course. Thank fsck that
 was not our only range, we would've gone bankrupt.

Hey, Nux!

I notice that those attacking me have walked around your comments without
addressing them.

And then, as I think of it, I wonder just how big the false positive is
for NIXSpam

   mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 2:10 PM,  m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 
 So, you're offering to pay the difference between the, what is it, $6/mo
 that I pay, and a commercial rate?

I think you could afford what it would cost to originate your mail
from a gmail or ymail account.  Even though I agree with your
sentiment that ordinary people should be able to control their own
stuff, I don't think it is worth the battle.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Ned Slider
On 05/12/13 20:02, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 1:04 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:

 It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam,

 The rest of the world begs to differ...  If it were easy to stop spam
 there wouldn't be any spam.


No, the rest of the world mostly just don't care. It's not difficult for 
an ISP/provider to block outgoing spam. Many ISPs manage to run clean 
operations and stay off blacklists. Do you think that's just luck?

 As you've found out, twice now, it's highly effective and gets people's
 attention.

 No, it is just annoying, and as you can see, the problem continues.


It might be annoying for him. It's not particularly annoying for me or 
the other millions of people who were being bombarded with the spam his 
servers are constantly spewing out.

The problem is his servers are spewing spam. That is the problem that 
continues and that is the problem that needs to be addressed. Mark's 
situation is merely the symptom.

Hostmonster obviously have no real interest in addressing it otherwise 
it wouldn't still be an ongoing issue. So as I said, he is irrelevant - 
he's just collateral damage in a much bigger battle.


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 2:15 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:
 
 It's not difficult to prevent
 outgoing spam,

 The rest of the world begs to differ...  If it were easy to stop spam
 there wouldn't be any spam.


 No, the rest of the world mostly just don't care. It's not difficult for
 an ISP/provider to block outgoing spam. Many ISPs manage to run clean
 operations and stay off blacklists. Do you think that's just luck?

No, I think they block port 25.  Of course you can stop spam if you
stop all email.  That doesn't really solve the problem for someone who
wants to have their own domain.   And regardless of whether there is
any spam or not, anyone can claim there was to get someone they don't
like on a blacklist.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
Ned Slider wrote:
 On 05/12/13 20:02, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 1:04 PM, Ned Slider n...@unixmail.co.uk wrote:
snip
 No, the rest of the world mostly just don't care. It's not difficult for
 an ISP/provider to block outgoing spam. Many ISPs manage to run clean
 operations and stay off blacklists. Do you think that's just luck?

Really? Name three.
snip
 No, it is just annoying, and as you can see, the problem continues.

 It might be annoying for him. It's not particularly annoying for me or
 the other millions of people who were being bombarded with the spam his
 servers are constantly spewing out.

 The problem is his servers are spewing spam. That is the problem that
 continues and that is the problem that needs to be addressed. Mark's
 situation is merely the symptom.

 Hostmonster obviously have no real interest in addressing it otherwise
 it wouldn't still be an ongoing issue. So as I said, he is irrelevant -
 he's just collateral damage in a much bigger battle.

Ok, you've made an assumption and an assertion based on that: you assert
that hostmonster, with its millions of domains (I asked tech support,
that's what they told me) is spewing out spam. Prove that assertion.
Esp. since I get blocked, on and off, for a day or two, and then sometimes
not for a week, and sometimes not for a month. My take, from this, is that
it is *not* spewing out spam, but rather that some sleazebag sets up
shop, or someone gets infected, sends it out, they finally find it and
shut them down.

So, justify your assertion with counter-evidence.

mark

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread John R. Dennison
On Thu, Dec 05, 2013 at 03:30:11PM -0500, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 
 So, justify your assertion with counter-evidence.

Please do so in a venue that is relevant to this on-going pissing
contest if you would be so kind.  Thank you.





John
-- 
A man who is of sound mind is one who keeps the inner madman under lock
and key.

-- Paul Valery, Bad Thoughts and Not So Bad, in The Collected Works of
   Paul Valery, edited by Jackson Mathews, Volume 14, page 450


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Les Mikesell
On Thu, Dec 5, 2013 at 3:23 PM, John R. Dennison j...@gerdesas.com wrote:
 
 So, justify your assertion with counter-evidence.

 Please do so in a venue that is relevant to this on-going pissing
 contest if you would be so kind.  Thank you.

You mean a venue that chooses to use the specific service being
discussed with the specific results being discussed?  Hmmm...

-- 
   Les Mikesell
 lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread John R. Dennison
On Thu, Dec 05, 2013 at 03:26:45PM -0600, Les Mikesell wrote:
 
 You mean a venue that chooses to use the specific service being
 discussed with the specific results being discussed?  Hmmm...

It stopped being that quite some time back.  Like the last time this
occured.  Or the time before that.  If there are issues like this that
need to be addressed there is an established address that one should be
using: $listname-ow...@host.tld - it will get routed to the person that
is the ultimate owner of the list; said list is available by looking at
the bottom of the listinfo web page:

http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

Arguing about this type of subject on the list doesn't do anything to
address the problem, if there is one to be addressed.





John

-- 
There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into
two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures
in opposition to each other.  This, in my humble apprehension, is to be
dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.

-- John Adams (30 October 1735 - 4 July 1826), first Vice President,
   second President of the US, father of John Quincy Adams, Letter to
   Jonathan Jackson (2 October 1789)


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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread m . roth
John R. Dennison wrote:
 On Thu, Dec 05, 2013 at 03:26:45PM -0600, Les Mikesell wrote:

 You mean a venue that chooses to use the specific service being
 discussed with the specific results being discussed?  Hmmm...

 It stopped being that quite some time back.  Like the last time this
 occured.  Or the time before that.  If there are issues like this that
 need to be addressed there is an established address that one should be
 using: $listname-ow...@host.tld - it will get routed to the person that
 is the ultimate owner of the list; said list is available by looking at
 the bottom of the listinfo web page:

 http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

 Arguing about this type of subject on the list doesn't do anything to
 address the problem, if there is one to be addressed.

I keep hoping, perhaps foolishly, that others who get hit with this will
add their voice, and that the list might go to using some other source to
block spam.

 mrak

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Re: [CentOS] ADMIN issue - manitu

2013-12-05 Thread Nux!
On 05.12.2013 20:15, m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
 Nux! wrote:
 On 05.12.2013 18:19, Kai Schaetzl wrote:
 Actually, Manitu, also known as NIXSpam, is quite a good list. I've
 been using only this one and Spamhaus for years. Very good FP:Spam 
 ratio.
 
 RBLs should at most be used in Spamassassin to increase the score,
 otherwise you risk losing legit email!
 
 And it does suck to be on them, way too many people run way too many
 lists. I still have a /21 listed in SORBS because once upon a time it
 used to be part of an ISP's /18 dynamic range. Obviously I can't use
 those IPs for customers (hosting) since their emails will almost 
 always
 get marked. Sorbs' support does not exist, of course. Thank fsck that
 was not our only range, we would've gone bankrupt.
 
 Hey, Nux!
 
 I notice that those attacking me have walked around your comments 
 without
 addressing them.
 
 And then, as I think of it, I wonder just how big the false positive 
 is
 for NIXSpam
 
mark

Different people, different opinions, different point of views. For 
some it's a blessing, for some it's a bloody curse.
I'd break the legs of that Sorbs person, but someone else might choose 
to kiss them instead, what can you do. We're ready to go to war for a 
frickin RBL. :-)

For what it's worth, I'm FOR ditching any RBLs except maybe Spamhaus 
and Spamcop who are very quick to delist addresses.
I'd also go at the list admin and ask to have your email address 
whitelisted.

If you still get nowhere with this I can help you host your email, just 
let me know.


-- 
Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!

Nux!
www.nux.ro
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