> I do not use the spamcop rbl, because spamcop doesn't check carefully > enough, imho, when it lists a server. I've heard that it repeatedly > lists mailing list servers and takes some time delisting them again.
I believe they all have a degree of "elasticity". I mean, they all have some mechanism for listing and delisting and most have chosen their method on purpose. Could someone list the RBLs in order of, let's say "strictest confidence" (only lists confirmed spamhauses that have been warned and are blatantly ignoring complaints) to "most likely to list my grandmother because she misspelled 'warehouse' again"? If someone with experience could list the RBLs by their philosophy, then it would be easier for us SysAdmins to choose our own tolerance. > If we're discussing uce measures: > > I've accumulated a few spamtrap accounts (former usenet or web mail > addresses). What possibilies to automatically report these are there? I > currently do > - redirect to [EMAIL PROTECTED] (but I heard that's out of service) > - report to razor (but that doesn't do anything against the spammer > > I would like it if an incoming mail would automatically cause a dsbl.org > and/or ordb.org check & listing, but I haven't been able to find such a > test program so far (there are some, but they expect me to specify the > IP - and I haven't got time to write a Received: header parser right > now. I also report to [EMAIL PROTECTED] but i'm afraid they just /dev/null it, trying to look like they are doing something. Thank you to anyone who can come up with a list of all RBLs and their characteristics. If nobody else has done it, i might be willing to put up a page with all the information on it. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]