ORDB.org Going Offline 156
Allan Joergensen writes "ORDB.org has announced that they will shut down their services after fighting open relays and spam for more than five and a half years.
The RBL DNS service and mailing lists will be taken down today (December 18, 2006) and the website will vanish by December 31, 2006." The reasons given tend to be the usual ones - volunteers have been focused on other things in life; my salute to those folks for keeping the service up as long as they did.
I'll miss' em (Score:2, Interesting)
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While the cancer of spam may have metastasized to other parts of the Internet, it doesn't mean it can't gro
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Whilst I see your point, this is prtty badly phrased - it implies almost an obligation, the little boy with his finger in the dam, and it's his calling, nay, his duty, to keep it there, for the sake of the rest of us.
Which is not the case.
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We regret to inform you that slashdot.org, at the ripe age of 8 and a half, is shutting down. It's been a case where all the comments were either too +5 Linux or -5 Microsoft or too insightful that the moderators had to mod it "+2 BSD". Also very little work has gone into maintaining our Mysql database. We should have switched to MS SQL Server long back.
This caused our readers to get pre-occupied with the only other a
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I vaguely remember doing that once, after my ISP refused to accept my outgoing mail, because they had assigned me an IP that had previously been used for an open relay.
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The reasons (Score:5, Informative)
I concur.
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Re:The reasons (Score:4, Informative)
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In the case of ORDB, out of a couple hundred thousand email rejections last week, only five were due to an ORDB listing. In my configurations, ORDB is fourth in line to other DNSBLs, like the SBL/XBL, which catch a good 73% of crap before ORDB even has a chance.
Many thanks to them for the work over the years.
I wonder... (Score:5, Insightful)
Still, it's pretty nice to think that they're going offline because they've largely solved the problem they were fighting. It's like declaring smallpox or polio extinct. And if they come back, we'll remember the formula.
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I wish I could agree with that sentiment, but I'd call it a closer analogy to say that the disease gained immunity to the best known antibiotic so far and further use of it just wastes resources better spent elsewhere.
The governments of the world need to make it legal to hunt down and torture spammers and their extended families to death. Until then, they will always find ways to fi
Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Funny)
Your post advocates a
( ) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based (x) vigilante
approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)
( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
( ) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
( ) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
( ) Users of email will not put up with it
( ) Microsoft will not put up with it
(x) The police will not put up with it
( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
( ) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business
Specifically, your plan fails to account for
(x) Laws expressly prohibiting it
( ) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
( ) Open relays in foreign countries
( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
( ) Asshats
( ) Jurisdictional problems
( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
( ) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
( ) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
( ) Extreme profitability of spam
(x) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
(x) Technically illiterate politicians
( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
( ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
( ) Outlook
and the following philosophical objections may also apply:
(x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever
been shown practical
( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
( ) Blacklists suck
( ) Whitelists suck
( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
( ) Sending email should be free
( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
(x) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
( ) I don't want the government reading my email
(x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough
Furthermore, this is what I think about you:
(x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a stupid person for suggesting it.
( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your
house down!
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(X) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!
Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
He didn't invent the list. That's the kind of laziness we're looking for.
He even used it for the checklist's intended reason -- as satire. EVERYTHING fails somewhere on that list.
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Exactly. That's why we should stop trying to fight or filter spam.
Now, getting back to the main point of the story, I'd like to interest you in a serios bussines opportunity...
- RG>
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Whoosh. I even said it was satire in the very post you responded to.
> If SPAM breaks the internet, SPAM will die.
My brain fairly vibrates with the impact of such tremendous insight. But the internet's been doing a pretty good job so far at surviving.
*sigh* (Score:2, Insightful)
The satire in question was written by anti-spam advocates; in part to ridicule amateur, armchair philosophers; who think that their knee-jerk response is better than anything the experts have come up over the years.
OTOH first time I saw
(x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough
used. Kudos
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If the RBLs go offline, will spammers shift back to using open relays? I suspect not; the bot-nets are harder to stop and, from the spammer's POV, probably more reliable. The dark side of distributed, highly redundant networks.
Botnets are trivial to stop, load up spamassassin and research how to tune the rules with SPF
Knock'em dead.
But ORDB will be sadly missed. It was in my 2 cents, the most reliable going. Every system it hit was because someone didn't configure it properly.
SORBS (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm not willing to pay Trend Micro for access to what used to be MAPS for my one, small domain, and I haven't found anyone other than SORBS offering a collection of dial-up addresses as a DNS blacklist. If there are other, reliable, dial-up blacklists, I'd love to hear a
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-matthew
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This is a misconception born at the hands of idiotic software like Norton AV.
A properly setup SMTP MTA will reject with a 55x (permanent failure) error, and the sending MTA generates the bounce message, sending it to the account generating the email, not looking at the From: address at all.
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Some admins prefer to use blacklists for scoring rather than automatic rejection. It cuts down greatly on the false positives.
-matthew
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SORBS has one useful list: the dial-up DNS blacklist (spare me the diatribes about being able to send mail from a dynamic address. I know the arguments, but the benefit doesn't outweigh the cost of the spam coming from that address space).
True. Now, if only someone actually had an accurate list of dynamic IP addresses, this would be a good strategy, but since neither SORBS nor anyone else actually has one, it gets rather annoying for those of us who get our email bounced or eaten because some idiot has
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Sorry, but as dynamic addresses go, MAPS certainly isn't reliable. It lists a number of statically allocated blocks (some addresses of which may indeed be abused) ans dynamic when they aren't.
For example my block is in the MAPS
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I have a machine in a range that SORBS thinks is dynamically allocated, but it's not.
Already offline? (Score:3)
Can anyone suggest a good alternative? I'm using spamhaus, sorbs, and uceprotect at the moment, and no, I won't use spamcop. ordb HAD been an excellent fourth.
ASSP (Score:2)
ASSP installs nicely (I'm actually running it on MS Server with hmailserver) and does what it says on the tin. Takes a week or so to train it up, but once it's up it easily gets 99% of all spam, tags it and then my mail server shoves it into my users junk folders.
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Also, for RBL's that might not be 100% reliable, there is a simple to way to add th
Re:Already offline? (Score:5, Insightful)
I haven't seen BadAnalogyGuy lately, so I'll have to do his job I guess:
Slapping mosquitos is not the most effective way of killing mosquitos, but I'm not going to ignore the ones sucking my blood simply because sprays, candles and electric noises work better.
'Not best' is not the same as 'not useful.'
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See the many postings below this about how many people are blocking thousands of mails at the front door BEFORE subjecting them to resource-intense or flaky at best filtering solutions.
And my original question still stands.
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Using BIND:
Set up a zone (ordb.yourdomain.tld, for example) and set up the zonefile with reversed IP records.
ddd.ccc.bbb.aaa IN A 127.0.0.1
*.ccc.bbb.aaa IN A 127.0.0.1
IN TXT
*.bbb.aaa IN A 127.0.0.1
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FTA: "open relay RBLs are no longer the most effective..."
Because most admins have sufficient clue now NOT to run open relays, that particular idiocy is less widespread nowadays. There are plenty of other IPs that belong on RBLs that aren't open relays.
Omnipotent awareness... or not (Score:3)
-Rick
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182 working spam databases listed. 254 total spam databases listed. About 681 represented, including country databases. List of All Known DNS-based Spam Databases. The most common way of detecting spam is by using spam databases (blacklists, sometimes incorrectly referred to as RBLs, since RBL is trademarked by MAPS) that list the addresses of mail servers known (or believed) to send spam.
Good case why not to trust "community" services? (Score:5, Insightful)
Thanks - that's not even two weeks notice.
More likely, they woke up one day and figured out they were sick of eating Ramen noodles while being taking for a ride by commercial leeches who never kicked back.
Re:Good case why not to trust "community" services (Score:1)
Anyone else notice this?
Re:Good case why not to trust "community" services (Score:3, Informative)
How did I come to find out that we had an open relay? Did ORDB notify us? Hell no. They just slapped us on their list, and our users started getting bounce messages from other
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Of course, if commercial organisations did wake up and realise they have a responsibilty to help support developers whose software they use, then probably developers would have a more comfortable lifestyle, and project development would become more professional and better organised.
Also, software is dif
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Err... the takedown notice is dated 18 Dec 2006... the takedown date is 18 Dec 2006.
That's 24 hours notice.
Are RBL's really finished (Score:5, Interesting)
Spamassassin is great, we have sever custom rules and find it very effective. However it is resource intensive, especially if you are to add features like OCR detection of image spam.
Is it really the case that folk should be accepting all this traffic from known open relays and then spending processor cycles analyzing it?
Is there a middle ground? Some third way that lets lets you reject as much as possible at the start of the SMTP transaction? Greylisting is certainly an option but it presents significant problems too - many companies simply won't respond. Automatic emails will be missed, signup to websites becomes problematic etc etc. What, if any, are the other options?
Re:Are RBL's really finished (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, some grey listing systems are better than others. One that really works well for me is sqlgrey http://sqlgrey.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net] Sqlgrey comes with a fairly decent list of servers to exclude due to their inability to properly follow specs, so you don't lose mail from most of the broken but nonspammer servers. This list is also updated automagically and seems to work pretty well.. makes greylisting actually usable, for us at least.
P.S. Don't want to start any holy wars, but if you're trying to fight mail and want a system thats easy to config and just works, postfix is a really great mail server.
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My address is not checkmeout105@hotmail.com, but that's who it seems the e-mail was addressed to.
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HTH
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Much like a physical business letter, SMTP messages have an envelope and a header.
Thanks for both enlightening me *and* making me feel like an idiot. Your analogy struck me as such a perfect one, and then I realized it's also an utterly obvious one. I've discussed SMTP envelopes before, but never thought to follow the analogy through to consider the mail headers as equivalent to the headings on a paper business letter. Duh!!! So obvious. Hit me like a bolt out of the blue, though.
Thanks again!
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Non FQDNs on the sender, recipient or hostname...
Most spam does not fail FQDN checks. You could consider it "yet another check...", catching some but not all mail, making there be less to check, but it has false positive problems that cause problems in this regard. I am in fact staff on an IRC network while has been forced to require an email check for nickname registration, and we have problems with mail servers rejecting our mail in some cases because of FQDNs problems. Others, like Gmail, accept it and it arrives instantly.
It isn't my area of knowledg
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Non FQDNs on the sender, recipient or hostname...
Most spam does not fail FQDN checks.
uhh... what?? Tons of spammers fail these checks. Compromised Windows boxes acting as spam zombies almost always fail these checks, and as have increasingly becoming a major source of spam over the last couple years, these types of checks have become more and more effective. On the largest mail system I have access to stats on (about 200k messages per day) these checks blocked about 20% of all mail yesterday.
You could consider it "yet another check...", catching some but not all mail, making there be less to check, but it has false positive problems that cause problems in this regard. I am in fact staff on an IRC network while has been forced to require an email check for nickname registration, and we have problems with mail servers rejecting our mail in some cases because of FQDNs problems. Others, like Gmail, accept it and it arrives instantly.
It isn't my area of knowledge but I'm assured that getting a FQDN isn't possible with our shell hosting, and these unnecessary filters creates a LOT of pain for users and staff who then must personally email the person to verify the email.
Is this a good idea if it hits false positive problems, and misses quite a lot anyway? Other checks would catch most spammers failing FQDN, and the number of false positives to spammers blocked who otherwise wouldn't be seems quite high.
Sounds like sour grapes to me. Anyone who is telling you it isnt possible to configure your
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I understand t
Re:Are RBL's really finished (Score:4, Informative)
For anyone who's wondering, here's what we've got going on, plus amavisd/clamav doing virus scanning. This blocks all spam I get (used to be 30-200 messages per day that Spamassassin would catch).
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A big one a lot of people don't like and I've never been sure why: 95%+ of all messages where the domain in the 'To:' doesn't match the DNS domain of the IP address in the 'X-Originating-IP:' line are SPAM. So just reject them ALL. SPAM problem solved. Whiners will be executed on site.
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But even if you meant the "From:", how do you deal with hosted mail domains? My domain might be one of thousands hosted at "smtpserver.bigprovider.com" or the like.
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That doesn't work for situations where the mail server hosts multiple domains on a single IP address. Which is a very common situation for all but the few hundred largest organizations. Everyone else typically shares spac
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I haven't had any issues with greylisting. I know of no emails that I haven't eventually received and even web-page sign-ups/registrations have gotten through without a hitch.
There ar
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SPF to the rescue (Score:2, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framewo rk [wikipedia.org] Spammers recently started forging my domain as their return address. I know this because I recieved a bucket-load of bounces every day until I blocked the catch-all address. All of that spam would have been blocked if the servers that bounced it had checked my SPF record first. It clearly specifies that all of the IP addresses where the spam is coming from are not authorized to serve email from my domain.
This is
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Just for the record... SPF is not anti-spam, it's anti-forgery. Which are admittedly overlapping problems.
Where SPF excels is:
- Blocking e-mail from an IP address that fails an SPF check. A good use of the system, but it probably won't block a ton of spam (spammers just create bogus domains with very loose SPF records).
- Eliminating bounce messages that are sent
Efficiency (Score:3, Informative)
Efficiency? (Score:2)
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For completeness' sake, here's the breakdown for yesterday:
- spamhaus: 4769 (96%)
- dsbl.org: 220 (4%)
- ordb.org: 3 (0%)
Open Relay Lists (Score:1)
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Spam control methodology (Score:3, Informative)
A "private" e-mail account, given only to family and close friends, whit a set of filtering rules to build the whitelist, and everything else run through bayesian filtering.
Between the two, I have to deal with very little spam.
OT:This is my 2,000th Slashdot comment...
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Damn. I only received 337 of them, my filter must have caught the rest!
RBLs not so trivial (Score:4, Informative)
For those of you relying on RBL lookups, the following are still available and seem to be very reliable, producing few to zero false positives:
zen.spamhaus.org
bl.spamcop.net
list.dsbl.org
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bl.spamcop.net
list.dsbl.org
Besides spamcop.net [slashdot.org], are there any other useful service to forward spam to to help add to these blacklists?
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However, I've had GREAT success with zen.spamhaus.org and list.dsbl.org. No false positives here either.
Spam Can-Doers (Score:1, Flamebait)
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CAN-SPAM took effect on 1 January 2004, so assuming you got 1 spam that month and it's doubled every month since, that means you're getting about 564 million spam emails a day now. I wouldn't want to be your ISP
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I wouldn't want to be my ISP, anyway - or I would be
Re:Spam Can-Doers (Score:4, Insightful)
The U.S. Senate voted 97-0 (with 3 nonvoting senators).
Congress voted in much a similar fashion: 392-5.
link [vote-smart.org]
Jump off that hate bandwagon and realize you being screwed over by both parties.
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Democrats are no saints. They certainly do their share of the screwing. But theirs has been sustainable. Under Republican rule, Democrats had to trade votes to Republicans, including ju
Spam (Score:1)
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How nice of them to let us know.... (Score:3, Interesting)
By giving people one entire day to remove their mailer configuration, they didn't leave people much time. Of course, that's sort of moot, I noticed early last week that my mailer wasn't getting responses from them any more, causing timeout delays on the query for every incoming message.
Ah, well. I guess I shouldn't complain, since this one inconsiderate act is vastly overshadowed by the usefulness they've provided over the years.
SORBS (Score:2, Informative)
2. SpamHaus do a decent job and they don't make funny/crazy assumptions, and they do try to keep the list up to date.
3. Even content check does not block spam... spammers are sending pictures with their message... and they make those hard to run thru OCR (just like the Human-Check here on
4. A world wide law against spam would help
ORDB largely redundant anyway (Score:2)
That said, I'd been considering removing ORDB from our checks for some time. On days when NJABL and SpamHaus were picking up 30-50k messages ea
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