Matt Kettler wrote:
> [...]
> You also get the same effect with European admins blacklisting whole
> major US ISP's (ie: verizon.net, comcast.net, etc).

Verizon had blocked Europe.
The revenge is sweet :-)

http://www.google.com/search?q=verizon+blocking+europe
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/01/14/verizon_email_block/
  Verizon persists with European email blockade
  Unsplendid isolation By John Leyden
  Published Friday 14th January 2005 16:17 GMT

> Both result from a failure to recognize that high spam volume isn't
> always due to being a spam domain..It could just be a really large
> number of people there, and if 1% of them have bots, that's a lot of
> spam. A small ISP or country with 50% infection rate would be much less
> noticeable. But then again, the nature of statisics and distributions is
> usually way beyond your average "MCSE in a week" boot-camp graduate.

I personally would suggest using "generic RDNS" blocks specially
tailored for such ISP.

-- 
[pl>en: Andrew] Andrzej Adam Filip : [EMAIL PROTECTED] : [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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