If you browse around the net, you'll find that the concept of ipv6 and
spam filtering is mostly still broken across-the-board, particularly
related to the concept of RBLs. It is unlikely that mail providers will
move to ipv6 anytime soon.

Here:
http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/spamassassin/devel/162929?do=post_view_flat

and here:

http://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/2011/03/08/lastest-boon-to-spammers-the-move-to-ipv6-apparently/

and here:

http://www.internet-security.ca/internet-security-news-archives-030/new-ipv6-internet-protocol-could-complicate-e-mail-spam-filtering.html

etc.

The exponential increase of ip addresses is a bad thing for e-mail and if
mailers start accepting mail from ipv6 addresses, the headaches are nearly
insurmountable as of now.

This problem has to be conquered by the big boys first and from what I've
read, e-mail will be the last thing to move to ipv6, if the protocol
actually gets off the ground at all and the world doesn't mostly end up on
CG NAT.

Tim

On Thu, May 12, 2011 8:49 am, Daniel Anliker wrote:
> hi list,
>
> as i see spamdyke and ipv6 is not working.
>
> first problem is this one:
>
> May 12 15:45:31 john spamdyke[19276]: DENIED_RDNS_MISSING from:
> [email protected] to: [email protected] origin_ip: 0.0.0.0 origin_rdns:
> (unknown) auth: (unknown) encryption: TLS
>
> it gives a ip 0.0.0.0 if the sender is a ipv6 address....
>
> best regards
> daniel
> _______________________________________________
> spamdyke-users mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users
>


-- 
Tim Pleiman
Bravo Systems Technologies
"Advanced Open Source Solutions for Business"
Chicago, IL USA

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