s can do something similar.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.restontech.com/#PGP |
|---|
| RestonTe
yet to pen a functional haiku, however.
...
alec
- --
`____
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.reston
block of 25 is the answer.
If the question is "how can we stop consumer bot armies from sending
spam" it is a pretty good, albeit incomplete, answer.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE
ous behavior
(135-139, 194, 445, 1433, 3306 come to mind) as a way to reduce their
support calls-- but they would have to balance that with the risk of
loosing customers. It's not as much a slippery slope as much as it is a
tightrope act (yes-- I am metaphorically challenged).
...
alec
-
run stunnel to allow incoming
mail submission on port 465 (SMTP + SSL).
> So, for us, having ISPs block port 25 is a problem.
Read: "for us, running a mail server is a problem"
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Tec
he DROP list on a free public wireless system I maintain, I was amazed
at how much egress traffic it blocked-- obviously rogue/bad/evil
webservers, IRC hosts, etc.
I wonder if anyone else is using it that way?
...
alec
- --
`____
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior P
r SMTP server (not on the XBL)
- - SMTP server transports mail to my system
Unless one of those systems mentioned above is a hijacked name server in
Kyiv (and thus on the DROP list), everything will work.
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and D
That's why I stick to ARCNET :)
...
alec
- --
`
/ Alec Berry \__
| Senior Partner and Director of Technology \
| PGP/GPG key 0xE8E9030F|
| http://alec.restontech.com/#PGP |
|---|
|
8 matches
Mail list logo