Using such an list of ip address from a major rbl is flawed at the
core of the idea. Over 85% of those 3 million ip address are spoofed
in the first place. Most are what would be called false positives.
Actually there are almost no false positives in the CBL. The three
million addresses on th
EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2006 10:43 AM
To: fbsd
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Deny large number of IPs via ipfw
On Sun, 11 Jun 2006, fbsd wrote:
> Using such an list of ip address from a major rbl is flawed at the
> core of the idea.
> Over 85% of those 3 million ip addre
On Sun, 11 Jun 2006, fbsd wrote:
Using such an list of ip address from a major rbl is flawed at the
core of the idea.
Over 85% of those 3 million ip address are spoofed in the first
place.
Most are what would be called false positives.
Reread the info at the source cbl.abuseat.org it says the d
Using such an list of ip address from a major rbl is flawed at the
core of the idea.
Over 85% of those 3 million ip address are spoofed in the first
place.
Most are what would be called false positives.
Reread the info at the source cbl.abuseat.org it says the data is
not intended to be used the w
"Dan Mahoney, System Admin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> I've got a file that I just synced from a major RBL, and I'd like to just
> use it to globally deny access to my system. Is there an easy way to do
> this within ipfw -- the file is about 3 *million* lines, and is from
> cb