Autor: Lou Vasquez Datum: To: exim users Betreff: Re: [exim] Spanish Law
Why you don't require a reverse and use the FQDN which isn't private.
Then add a layer allowing the domain owner to become a memer/manager of
your list wrt to their domain. That way they can either be involved and
easily responsive, or end up having the whole domain get a bad score, or
get blacklisted. They are technically the owner of the IP and it
empowers them to manage it but without any heavy tools like ntop or
whatnot to tell who is spamming.
I've always liked the idea of whitelists, but I think this is a good
migration path, using both or better yet a scoring system.
Lou
Ian Eiloart wrote: > --On 23 July 2006 06:22:56 -0700 Marc Perkel <marc@???> wrote:
>
>
>> If sending the IP address of a host were illegal then the received
>> header lines would be illegal.
>>
>
> Not true. Think of it by analogy to a telephone system. The IP addresses in
> the headers are equivalent to caller-id. That's not a bad system.
>
> Imagine now, that I were establishing a public system where I asked people
> to report on incoming phone calls. Would you be happy for your phone number
> to be listed with reports on how happy people were to get your calls? On a
> public database? Perhaps you would - but it's not so obvious that everyone
> would.
>
> Now, I'm not arguing that anything you're doing *is* illegal. Just that you
> might be wrong to state categorically that it is legal without being
> specific about the jurisdiction.
>
>
>> Think before you post!
>>
>
> Actually, I did. Thanks so much for the advice, though.
>
>