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Duncan Hill wrote:
> On Monday 07 August 2006 00:02, QQQQ wrote:
>> | 2250 0733.com
>
>> Here are my numbers from last week:
>>
>> 5006 0451.com 3845 53.com
>
> Not seeing anywhere near as high, but this is only on my personal
> server: 44    0733.com 34    0451.com 11    0668.com 4     023.com
> 2     08.com 2     020.com 1     212.com 1     07770500.com 1
> 01191.com 1     004.com
>
> However, the majority are already being rejected with my standard
> rules in Postfix (like don't accept mail from certain netblocks).
> I would have sworn there used to be a domain registration rule that
> said pure-numeric domains were illegal, but I'm not sure.

The RFC's actually state that a domain MUST start with a letter, and
be any letter or digit or hyphen after. So according to the RFC's
purely numberic domains are illegal.

(e.g. From RFC 1035)

<domain> ::= <subdomain> | " "

<subdomain> ::= <label> | <subdomain> "." <label>

<label> ::= <letter> [ [ <ldh-str> ] <let-dig> ]

<ldh-str> ::= <let-dig-hyp> | <let-dig-hyp> <ldh-str>

<let-dig-hyp> ::= <let-dig> | "-"

<let-dig> ::= <letter> | <digit>

<letter> ::= any one of the 52 alphabetic characters A through Z in
upper case and a through z in lower case

<digit> ::= any one of the ten digits 0 through 9


Seems clear to me... And since RFC1035 is still current, I'm not sure why
purely numeric domains are considered acceptable. (Apart from I can't
think
of a really good reason apart from pedanticness to stop them).

Hamish,




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