on Sun, Jun 29, 2003 at 09:46:28PM +0100, Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to put together a web data base to allow people identify
which machines are the primary routes of spam into our Inboxes.
Does anyone have a useful link? Spamcop seem to have a fine list
on Sun, Jun 29, 2003 at 09:46:28PM +0100, Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to put together a web data base to allow people identify
which machines are the primary routes of spam into our Inboxes.
get the ip# of the spammer and check it against the existing
On Mon, Aug 04, 2003 at 11:03:00AM +0100, Karsten M. Self wrote:
... In fact, such recording itself is useful as an antispam measure.
One tactic is to deny (non-permanent error) the first connection that
a mail server, any server, makes to your host. Most servers will wait
through a timeout
My domain names are being flooded with bounces these days. After
talking with others it seems to be their largest source of bad mail,
too.
I think what's happening is a virus is attached to email that turns a
machine into a mail proxy. Then mail is sent out from that machine, but
with a from
Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:
[...]
I'm trying to put together a web data base to allow people identify
which machines are the primary routes of spam into our Inboxes.
That's a rather big project If you're trying to put something together
to aid people in filtering stuff, only doing this is not
Hi all,
I'm trying to put together a web data base to allow people identify
which machines are the primary routes of spam into our Inboxes.
Does anyone have a useful link? Spamcop seem to have a fine list but I
don't really plan on spending $1000 right now.
--
Best regards,
Patrick Kirk
On Sun, 29 Jun 2003, Patrick Kirk wrote:
Hi all,
I'm trying to put together a web data base to allow people identify
which machines are the primary routes of spam into our Inboxes.
That's a rather big project If you're trying to put something together
to aid people in filtering stuff, only
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