On Tue, 8 Sep 2009, Lars Nooden wrote:
Steve Fairhead wrote:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically called
ssl.somedomain.com, so spamd doesn't catch it.
- The domain is entirely sacrificial, and may only exist for a few days
before being blocked by the
lars.cura...@gmail.com
To: Steve Fairhead st...@fivetrees.com
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Sent: Tuesday, September 08, 2009 2:20 AM
Subject: Re: New spammers' behaviour pattern
Steve Fairhead wrote:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically
called
ssl.somedomain.com, so
Message -
From: Lars Nooden lars.cura...@gmail.com
To: Steve Fairhead st...@fivetrees.com
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Sent: Tuesday, September 08, 2009 2:20 AM
Subject: Re: New spammers' behaviour pattern
Steve Fairhead wrote:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically
Steve Fairhead wrote:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically called
ssl.somedomain.com, so spamd doesn't catch it.
- The domain is entirely sacrificial, and may only exist for a few days
before being blocked by the registrar (or blacklisted by me).
Domain
Hi folks,
I'm seeing a new pattern of behaviour from spammers over the last few
months, which shows signs of growing. Briefly:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically called
ssl.somedomain.com, so spamd doesn't catch it.
- The domain is entirely sacrificial, and
On Mon, Sep 7, 2009 at 1:53 PM, Steve Fairheadst...@fivetrees.com wrote:
Hi folks,
I'm seeing a new pattern of behaviour from spammers over the last few
months, which shows signs of growing. Briefly:
- Mail originates from a correctly-configured mailserver, typically called
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