On 20/11/2024 12:55, Nix wrote:
On 19 Nov 2024, Greg Troxel told this:

Matija Nalis <mnalis-sa-l...@voyager.hr> writes:

 From 
https://knowledge.validity.com/s/articles/Accessing-Validity-reputation-data-through-DNS
 :

  Starting March 1, 2024, Validity will allow up to 10,000 requests to 
anonymous users over a 30-day period.

10k requests per 30-day period is about 333 queries/day. Or less than 14 
queries per hour.
Not very much at all (and certainly at least order of magnitude less than your 
stated traffic).
No amount of local DNS caching is going to fix limits *that low*.

That is remarkably low.

... the account is free and then they hit you with an EULA that says

The Services are available at the then-current rate. Customer shall
pay all applicable fees when due as invoiced and, if fees are being
paid via credit card or other electronic means, Customer authorizes
Validity to charge fees using Customer’s selected payment method.

By my reading that means they can just decide to start charging you and
you have no recourse?! Though the account is explicitly stated in huge
letters to be "free", so one hopes that would count as the "then-current
rate". The near-contradiction is unfortunate though, and there's no
indication about them having to tell you when they change their fees.
(Not that they could get any money from me without asking anyway.)

The account requires a 'company name', so I guess if you're an
individual you're... fucked?

Sorry but this is conspiracy theory rubbish. You can open an account easily and use your name as a business. You can possibly easily put in "none" or "n/a" and the account is yours. No billing details or address details at all so how can they suddenly start billing?

Just accept that if you want to start using their information for free, you will have to give a name and email address. You will also need to declare an IP address or CIDR, presumably for their whitelist.

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