On Sat, Aug 02, 2003 at 09:15:31AM +, Ralph J.Mayer wrote:
> > 1) What can I do to minimize traffic to my site?
>
> Well, if its possible, erase the mx-records for this domain.
I definitely can't do that, it's my company's domain :-)
I use exim, I did turn on "receiver_verify" which at least
On Sat, Aug 02, 2003 at 09:15:31AM +, Ralph J.Mayer wrote:
> > 1) What can I do to minimize traffic to my site?
>
> Well, if its possible, erase the mx-records for this domain.
MTAs resolve and use the A Resource Record if the MX Resource Record
does not exist.
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| Rico -mc- Gloeckner |
> 1) What can I do to minimize traffic to my site?
Well, if its possible, erase the mx-records for this domain.
rm
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> depends what "reply-to" addresses they are using. maybe you can block
> those with some receipent_maps in postfix.
They are random and generally invalid, so they generate bounces when people
reply to them. In the case of the spam bouncing, then my configuration
simply drops the bounce.
I'm in
Thursday 31 of July 2003 15:51, Dale E. Martin >
> Is there anything I can do to combat this?
depends what "reply-to" addresses they are using.
maybe you can block those with some receipent_maps in postfix.
i hope you don't use multidrop mailboxes
(if you use postfix then also use local_recipi
On Thu, Jul 31, 2003 at 09:51:37AM -0400, Dale E. Martin wrote:
> Hello. Russian spammers seem to be using the "clifton-labs.com" domain as
> their "reply-to:" for a bunch of widely varying spam messages. This means
> we're getting tons of bounces and replies to spam messages we did not send
> ou
Hello. Russian spammers seem to be using the "clifton-labs.com" domain as
their "reply-to:" for a bunch of widely varying spam messages. This means
we're getting tons of bounces and replies to spam messages we did not send
out.
Is there anything I can do to combat this? It's not a big problem b
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