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Re: [ietf-smtp] EHLO domain validation requirement in RFC 5321

2020-10-04 18:39:21
On 10/4/20 7:09 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:

Keith Moore writes:

On 10/4/20 5:46 PM, John Levine wrote:

*  Do not host your email system ‘in the cloud’
I'm not sure what this actually means or why it's still a bad idea.
Cloud hosting makes a lot of sense for various reasons.
It's a bad neighborhood, since you can expect your neighbors to be
poorly managed botted spam-spewing web servers. It varies by cloud
provider but the median is pretty bad.

Is it really fair to assess senders based on their "neighborhoods"?    At

Life's not fair.

Whether it's fair, or not, if someone wishes to evaluate an individual IP address based on its "neighborhood", a.k.a., the hosting provider, it is their prerogative to do so. Their mail server, their rules.

As long as they're only handling their own mail, I'd agree.

Or, if someone decides to willingly outsource their evaluation to a third party provider, it is their prerogative to do so as well.

Sure, though one hopes that the third party operates by published criteria that helps the client evaluate that provider's effectiveness and sanity.

what point does this depart from common sense and into the realm of pure prejudice?  ("That IP address is from across the tracks, which is a bad part of the net.")

Yes, it is prejudice. So?

At least you're willing to admit it.

See, I'm fine with penalizing operators that have clearly established bad reputations through bad behavior.   I'm not so fine with penalizing operators that merely have the misfortune to have "bad IP addresses", or send traffic from "bad neighborhoods".

If there's a threshold for responsible behavior such that an operator's traffic should be trusted, it seems like that threshold should be widely known so that all operators can decide for themselves whether to meet that threshold or not.   If, on the other hand, it's completely arbitrary, well that's not a recipe for reliable mail service.

I'm prejudiced against Chinanet, China Unicom, Digital Ocean, and a few others. All I see from those providers are dictionary attacks, and spam. And no response to abuse complaints. So, goodbye. Is it fair to the lessors of the IP addresses that do not launch dictionary attacks or spam outbursts? Yes, it's unfair. Well, that's life. Sorry. I don't have to the time to keep track of bad IPs, on a one by one basis. I have other things that are more important on my priority list.

There happens to be some entities who do not like the side of railroad tracks that I live in, by the way. Or, they outsource their mail filtering to third parties that carry that opinion. I never whined about how unfair it is. And it never entered my mind to complain to them as well. I recognized that it's their mail server, their rules. They are free to take care of their business, and I'm free to take care of mine, in whichever way I see fit.

The purpose of IETF (and therefore this list) is to promote interoperability, not to degrade it or shield those who do so.

In most respects outsourcing of server provisioning, maintenance, and connectivity has become normal, widely accepted, often recommended practice.   Why should email be different?

Who said it should be?

This part of the discussion was about a rule to not host mail servers "in the cloud".   To me "cloud" means the kinds of outsourcing I listed above.   Or would you define "cloud" differently?


It's hard to escape the impression that a lot of spam filters are based on imposing completely arbitrary restrictions on senders, on the belief that "good senders" will know which hoops they have to jump through (and have sufficient funding to do so) while "bad senders" won't.

Yes, they may seem to be arbitrary to an outside observer. But, they must have merit to whoever is using that spam filter. If it didn't have any merit, then they would not be put into place, by definition.

I disagree.  I've seen lots of spam filtered for meritless reasons, I've seen lots of examples of operators engaging in completely arbitrary behavior.

And the only ones whose opinion counts, with respect to their mail server, is them.

Emphatically disagree.   And that path leads to a thoroughly dysfunctional mail system, in which senders cannot assure the reliable delivery of mail even if it's legitimate content sent from a willing sender to a willing recipient.    Which is an accurate description of what we have today.


If it makes sense, to them, to enable EHLO domain verification (dragging this subject matter back into the thread kicking and screaming), then they're going to do that no matter what verbiage remains in the successor to RFC 5321. You can take that to the bank.


Yes, people will defend their own stupidity and irresponsibility until their deathbeds.     That doesn't mean that IETF should support it.

Keith


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