On 12/2/2014 12:24 PM, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:


On 12/2/2014 6:19 AM, LuKreme wrote:
On Dec 1, 2014, at 10:28 PM, Ted Mittelstaedt<t...@ipinc.net>  wrote:
This is assuming of course that your instantly blocking everything from a sender that happens to email a honeypot.

Right. That i the *point* of a honeypot. The only thing going to a honeypot is going to be a spammer.

Most honeypots are not used in such a draconian fashion.

Every single one I’ve ever seen has.


i see tons of spam relayed through throwaway accounts on Yahoo, and even some from Gmail and Microsoft's various domains. This is to all manner of accounts, both valid and invalid, former accounts and accounts that never existed. So your saying it's OK to block those because you get a piece of spam from them to a honeypot?

Or are you saying that the spammers NEVER use throwaway accounts on those large providers?

Or are you saying that with your honeypots that the large providers get a free pass to spam you when they email your honeypots?
For me, spam is always about minimizing collateral damage but it is far from an exact science and subject to friendly debate to improve things for everyone.

Let's remember who the bastards are (the spammers) and not attack people's honeypots/DNSWLs, etc. because if you don't like their policies, you don't have to use them.

Regards,
KAM

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