Search engines on DNSBLs:

multiRBL.valli.org
www.rbls.org

On Wed, Feb 6, 2019 at 15:19, Tom Hendrikx <t...@whyscream.net> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> Anyone can start a DNSBL and list IP space of people they don't like, as
> you surely know. As long as no one uses such a DNSBL to block traffic,
> no harm is done.
>
> The interesting part is which "engines" (I guess that you mean antispam
> software or antispam saas providers) think that such a DNSBL should be
> actually used. Can you disclose which parties you found?
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Tom
>
> On 06-02-19 14:40, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
>> The spammers at gremlin.ru have just created a homepage, with no
>> information on how to delist an IP.
>>
>> Their fake dnsbl is listed as genuine in at least two antispam engines.
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 6, 2019 at 12:55, Rupert Gallagher <r...@protonmail.com
>> <mailto:r...@protonmail.com>> wrote:
>>> This is to inform about a new type of SPAM aggression.
>>>
>>> We received from Russia, for months, and redirected them automatically
>>> to an administrative address for manual inspection. All emails were
>>> spam with links. From the standpoint of the attacker(s), all emails
>>> were delivered, but none turned into exploits.
>>>
>>> Today, we learned that "gremlin.ru" included our IPs in their DNSBL.
>>> We followed the address to de-list, but gremlin.ru does not exist.
>>>
>>> So, if you are successful against Russian spam, you will be ...
>>> blacklisted by an unknown gremlin.
>>>
>>
>>

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