Re: Current status?
- From: "Richard B. Gilbert" <rgilbert88@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 08 Sep 2008 14:08:51 -0400
Bill Gunshannon wrote:
In article <zYmdnV7yroyp3VjVnZ2dnUVZ_v_inZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxx>,
"Richard B. Gilbert" <rgilbert88@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
Bill Gunshannon wrote:In article <KKadnb_N_b8StljVnZ2dnUVZ_vKdnZ2d@xxxxxxxxxxx>,My ISP has a spam filter effective enough that spam is not a problem for me! I get the occasional "401 scam" but that's about all.
"Richard B. Gilbert" <rgilbert88@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
Bill Gunshannon wrote:Like I said, I have been over this a half-dozen tiems already. All thatIn article <g9r0lf$g15$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,Perhaps it would. But where would you get a "social solution"? How would you implement it? How would you deal with the anti-social creeps who "zombie" a PC or two or twenty and use them to pump spam into the net? Hint: you will NEVER get the liberals to agree to the death penalty! Hell, you can even spank a misbehaving child any longer!
david20@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
In article <7h%vk.609$393.335@trnddc05>, John Santos <john@xxxxxxx> writes:What does this buy you? You would still need to know who your MTA isBill Gunshannon wrote:Modern MTAs can be configured to allow mail clients to submit mail to them on the mail submission port (port 587) rather than port 25. See RFC 2476 http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2476.htmlIn article <g9pl82$lh7$4@xxxxxxxxx>,Yup. I think that many of the problems arise because MUAs use the same
helbig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Phillip Helbig---remove CLOTHES to reply) writes:
In article <t_Wvk.2076$U5.1028@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
=?ISO-8859-1?Q?Jan-Erik_S=F6derholm?= <jan-erik.soderholm@xxxxxxxxx>
writes:
protocol (SMTP) and port (25) to send mail to MTAs as MTAs use to relay
mail to each other.
andc it would still need to be willing to accept email from you. It is
all the silly little notification apps that wree brought up here as
justification for allowing anybody to use port 25. They have no builtin
method of authenticating so the port number used changes nothing. I
certainly would not accept email on my MTA from someone on port 587 that
I would not also accept on port 25. The purpose of port 587 sand RFC
2476 is noto to control SPAM it is to make sure outgoing email meets
the proper formating requoirements of the other RFC's.
Not sure what you make as differnt with "Message store". Unless youOn the other hand MTAs talk to MUAs (when deliveringLogically there are three parties involved not two.
mail) using either of 2 different protocols (that I know of), POP3 on
port 110 and IMAP on port 143. (I don't think anything does POP2 on
port 109 any more.)
MTA, MUA and Message store.
are separating the guy MTA from the machine that runs POP or IMAP.
I don't see that as necessarily being a separate Email function although
it is possible and may even have some utility on a big enough system.
The MTA delivers mail to another MTA or to a message store.Agreed, but the "Message Store" is not necessarily even a part of the
The MUA originates mail and sends it to a MTA.
Mail clients generally incorporate the above MUA functionality together with
the ability to display and manipulate mail in the message store.
POP and IMAP are protocols used to access and manipulate the message store.
They are NOT used to deliver mail to the message store.
Email system and I don't believe it has ever been considered by IETF.
I have users who use NFS to read their email. Does that make NFS an
Email Protocol, too? And, of course, Wessage Store is also irrelevant
to the problem of how to get the email system to be more immune to SPAM.
Note.Maybe so, but if people played by the rules, basic SMTP is more than adequate
The SMTP servers which come with the TCPIP stacks (TCPWARE, MULTINET or TCPIP
SERVICES/UCX) are NOT fully fledged modern MTAs. For that you would need either
PMDF or MX.
(
PMDF is a commercial product but is available free for hobbyist use. MX is now an open-source free product see
http://www.madgoat.com/
However I'm not aware of anyone currently continuing development of MX.
)
to the task. If ISP's blocked port 25 for all machines in their domain other
than their MTA I would need to filter incoming ports on my end. And RBL's
would rapidly become redundant.
Sadly, we are forced to spend a lot of time effort and technology trying
to, once again, solve a social problem. A social solution would work a
lot better.
is needed already exists. It takes only administrative changes (which is
why I said it would require more effort on the part of admins). If you
are truly interested, email me and I will explain it to you. Or, if
others actually express interest I will post it here again. But I
expect most here are not in the least bit interested.
bill
And how many messages have you not receieved because of their SPAM filter?
False Positives are at least as bad a problem as False Negatives. And for
a business, they can be worse.
If I did not receive a message, it's unlikely that I would be aware of it except if it came from family or friends and they inquired if I had received it or complained about my failure to reply.
I do get mail from PC Connection, CDW, HP, Amazon, and a few other commercial enterprises that I have some kind of relationship with. I don't consider it spam and don't complain about it.
Comcast does seem to block 99.9+% of the people selling penis enlargers, nude photographs, drugs without prescription, etc.
And, before you sing the praises of Comcast...... I just looked at my
logs and I have several hundred rejected connection from comcast addresses
and that is just since midnight.
My router blocks any and all connections that did not originate from my home network. If I check the router's logs, something I may do once or twice a year, there is somebody attempting a connection every fifteen to twenty seconds, twenty-four hours a day. Should I wish to receive incoming connections, I believe that I can configure it to allow specific originating addresses and ports but I can't think of any reason why I should want to. That box only cost me about $80 US and it has paid for itself several times over!
.
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