Hello Rob, Of course I looked at the page, and my understanding is, it describes very good, what UCEPROTECT does. Thus if it is a parody, then it is a good one. Do you have insights on that question? Btw, I was on UCEPROTECT black list for some time, and really, there is no channel you can complain to them, which for sure violates GDPR. I got onto their black list because I did some tests on email security of authorities, and therefore also have some suspects w.r.t. which authorities might be using UCEPROTECT, but I didn´t spend the time required to track it down as I didn´t have a real need to communicate to them. Regards, Joachim
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org <owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org> Im Auftrag von Rob McGee Gesendet: Montag, 5. Dezember 2022 23:14 An: postfix-users@postfix.org Betreff: uceprotect.wtf (was: Send email to one @domain.com via authenticated relay?) On 12/2/2022 3:27 PM, Joachim Lindenberg wrote: > UCEProtect are gangsters, even the founder admits: > https://uceprotect.wtf/ > You don´t want to do anything about it, > except you are located in Europe> and can complain to their customers and authorities violating GDPR. Excuse me, Joachim, but did you look at uceprotect.wtf and think that site is in any way affiliated with the UCEPROTECT DNSBLs? It is very clearly a parody, put up by someone else who falsely believed that a UCEPROTECT listing was the cause of email delivery problems. This person went to a lot of effort to portray Dirk Lautenschlager in the worst possible light. It was not worth the effort! Just ignore UCEPROTECT, as any serious email administrator does. Being listed there will not cause any significant email problems. The only sites who use it are run by very inexperienced people and/or those who don't care about receiving email. That is to say, not serious sites. -- http://rob0.nodns4.us/