> I had a brilliant idea to catch a lot of spam and it seems to work.
Sorry, I had the same idea except I was planning on locking out anyone who
hits the secondary w/o touching the primary. It was a littlemore complex.
Primary would refuse all mail (defer) and secondary did the work. Most
spammers never try 2 times or more. So, spam that hits primary is defered
(never try again), spam hits secondary w/o touching primary was flat out
refused, any message that hits primary first, then secondary was accepted.
I never did this as I only have 1 IP per computer. I also know some brain
damaged servers will send mail to the first found MX ignoring priority.
# mx animx.eu.org
animx.eu.org MX 0 ani.animx.eu.org
animx.eu.org MX 10 veg.animx.eu.org
# mx animx.eu.org
animx.eu.org MX 10 veg.animx.eu.org
animx.eu.org MX 0 ani.animx.eu.org
#
I think aol.com had such brain damaged servers. I forgot whoelse so this
wouldn't work correctly.
> What I did was set a secondary MX record to be another IP on the same
> computer as my primary email server. I had noticed that some spammers
> often will email the secondary rather than the primary MX believing that
> the secondary has less filtering. In my case there never is a time when
> the secondary is up and the primary is down. So - anything coming into
> the secondary is spam.
>
> I did a test and it seems to work. I searched my spam pile and had 8907
> matches on the secondary. But searching the ham pile I got 0 matches.
>
> The only issue is if I were really down for some time I might want to
> disable this trick for a few hours after coming back up.
If you're really using 2 IPs on the same machine, if you're down, BOTH are
down.
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