From: Yakov Shafranovich <research(_at_)solidmatrix(_dot_)com>
...
as part of an overall solution. If we utilize some form of a RMX/rDNS
system, there is still an issue of dealing with the email arriving from
...
either here or elsewhere on the Net: assigning priority to each message.
Messages with different priority levels can be routed accordingly, possible
spam can be delayed by a significant number of hours or days during which
the spammer's website and email accounts will be probably terminated by
their ISP. Legitimate email will still get through, but the inherent
"slowness" will force the senders to complain to their ISP to switch over
to a RMX or rDNS system.
There are already two headers mentioned in RFC 2076, section 3.9:
"Priority:" and "Precedence:" According to RFC 2076 these headers "can
...
I don't understand the idea It can't be that spam either would or
would not have a Priority or Precedence header as it comes from the
spammer, since spammers would immediately add or not the required
header. Do you mean that a receiving MTA would add or adjust a header
based on RMX or reverse DNS checking, and then delay or expedite the
message based the value in the header? Problems I see with that idea are:
- There's no need for the receiving MTA to add headers. It could
must segregate incoming messages, such as into sendmail queue
directories. You could delay the processing of some queues.
- There will be at least as many complaints from local users about
the delays than from remote users to the remote users' ISPs.
- What do you do with spam after it has been delayed, deliver it?
Or is the idea only to delay and penalize any and all mail with
RMX/rDNS support by sending MTAs to speed up the transition to
common support for RMX/rDNS?
- If you accept the mail and then delay it, it doesn't matter whether
the spammers accounts have been terminated as far as spam victim is
concerned. It's also a stretch to say that the spammer's accounts
would be terminated within hours or even days. Many spammers have
what they call "bulllet proof bandwidth." Then there are the senders
of unsolicited bulk advertising including Topica, Roving Software,
RealNetworks, American Express, and most DMA members (according to
the DMA if not most DMA members themselves). There is no prospect
of the accounts of those organizations being terminated.
Vernon Schryver vjs(_at_)rhyolite(_dot_)com
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