> On Jul 23, 2022, at 01:14, Hans-Martin Mosner via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> > wrote: > > 23. Juli 2022 00:54, "Atro Tossavainen via mailop" <mailop@mailop.org> > schrieb: > >> Er, I think you mean >> >> https://msbl.org/ebl.html > > Yeah, basically that, except that i'm thinking of a somewhat wider scope by > also covering compromised mailboxes, which gets closer to the PII danger zone > as those woould belong to individuals more likely than the typical spammer > addresses which are probably controlled by spammer teams or at least have not > the slightest relation to the particular spammer using them. > > But the presence of the EBL shows that other people think that hashed e-mail > addresses are reasonably safe to handle, even though they (like most BL > operators) prefer to stay somewhat anonymous. That's at least a partial > answer to my concerns.
I have several catch-all domains that have been dictionary spammed with no use, ever, of all the addresses but like, one. On the same note, dayjob has several addresses, like the codesign@ and pgpkey@ addresses which are tied to things, and go to a mailbox, but that nobody will EVER subscribe to a list. I also see a fair volume of trafic to various noreplys at, that I am pretty sure are NOT non-delivery notifications. I would love a way to give those addresses (in a hashed form) to ESPs saying "Look, if somsone is sending to those, it's a bogus list and does not pass muster, and you should reject the customer". I'd love a way to put those addresses in the DNS as a similar flag. "Do not allow this address to be added to any mailing lists, promotional marketing, or @##$*&#ing google groups, period. Attempts to do so are suspect". -Dan _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop