On Sun, 12 Jun 2016 19:54:31 -0400 Alvin Starr <alvin@netvel.net> wrote: <snip snippety snip>
All you need to end up on an RBL is one hacked user. Been there. Cleaned up after that.
If you have a few tens to hundreds of million of clients(like the big guys) you will have lots who are compromised and now sources of spam. Its amazing the the big guys don't have all their mail servers blocked all the time.
The bigger they get the more difficult it becomes to block them, the only spam that comes through our new anti spam system we call hiders and multi's multis - google, hotmail, yahoo hiders - the legit ESP's that also sends spam (they send email fro .gov and then offers thge service of sending marketing email) almost no other spam gets through at all (as hacked b0xen are added so quickly)
Your right that its annoying that the big guys seem to get by without paying attention to the rest of us.
blasting out email with no/limited costs - I am not really surprised that people do not react more strongly to this.. imho people have been in love with google etc and when you are in love you do not see the flaws in the matrix
As an aside some times I get the feeling RBLs are getting close to being extortionist in their tactics. I have had clients with mail servers that get black listed and they find themselves having to pay to get off some of the RBL's.
we as a Linux and open source community should help to educate people people should not use non RFC operated RBL's (see compliance bottom here: http://spamid.net/?spam=definitions ) Andre