> I was thinking the exact same thing.
> 
> A number of our customers use the ability to customize their SMTP  
> banner via our products in order to avoid some very basic system  
> identification by spammers (Cisco PIX does this too for instance, but  
> in a very broken and disruptive way).  It wouldn't escape detailed  
> analysis, but if a spammer can't casually discover what type of anti- 
> spam system they're connecting to, they're less likely to attempt any  
> work-arounds.
> 
> In the case of a greylisting type of solution, it seems that  
> identification would be especially devastating since the work-around  
> is so trivial.  Unless my understanding is very wrong, the whole  
> effectiveness of the solution depends on the spammers not realizing  
> the difference between a "normal" MTA and one that greylists.
> 

        No, in my experience it's the opposite. I change my sendmail
banners to look like spamd. the simplistic spammers see that and
disconnect.

        Which suits me fine.

        -Bob

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