-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Francisco Borges <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've used (through notespam) for my own private email, the following > lists: > Visi (relays.visi.com); > ORDB (relays.ordb.org); > SpamCop (bl.spamcop.net); > dorkslayers (orbs.dorkslayers.com). Spamcop is what I use. I recommend it. I also respectfully demand that for whatever list you use, you reject it WITHOUT mentioning the blackhole list. It's not the list's fault that you decided to use their listings as grounds for rejection, they don't need flak properly directed at you. Furthermore, be sure you have exceptions so mandatory recipients like postmaster and abuse always accept whether or not the sending host is listed in a BL or your site will get listed in rfc-ignorant.org's blacklists around the first time someone who is aware of rfc-ignorant.org tries to report a mail problem or network abuse. > After dorkslayers started giving false positive to every single query > I made to it, I droped it and never used it again. Dorkslayers is dead, AFAIK. > SpamCop works fine for my own email, where most people are whitelisted, > but is said [1] not to be suitable for a production environment and what > we have here is precisely that... I use it on a 30-user hobby server with users almost exclusively in North America. Your mileage may vary with a larger server. - -- Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Linux. You can find a worse OS, but it costs more. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFA0+xFUzgNqloQMwcRAtQQAKChAAKsZo84/V8+M86BD1kSRam30ACff9l9 xkjqr41x49b096eGRygr2RA= =oCho -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----