 fantomposter Phantom Poster Premium join:2002-09-21 Independence, OH
| reply to TamaraB Re: Why no revision to SMTP to include authenticat
said by TamaraB :
He can't! He is not listed as authoritave for comcast IP's, he can use a redirect mechinism, but that does the oposite of what he wants.
I have not seen a spec on SPF that says you check IP addresses. It only checks the SPF records for the domain name in the from field.
quote:
My smtp server gets a connect from that trojened comcast machine, my server checks with COMCAST DNS for spf, not his DNS...
You got that backwards. That is not what SPF does. If I have that wrong point me to a website that explains it is otherwise.
All SPF does is check the authoritative DNS for the DOMAIN name in the from field. It checks the DNS records for that domain name and makes sure there is an SPF record that shows the sending computers IP address. If spammer controls his own domain name then he can put any IP address he wants in the SPF record.
Check here: »spf.pobox.com/faq.html
And scroll down to the part where the headline is:
"It doesn't really prevent spam. Spammers can always get throwaway domains, etc."
Don't get me wrong, SPF is needed, to fix the virus bounces and the forged from address's in spam, it does a great job of that, but not much more. |
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  TamaraB Question The Current Paradigm Premium join:2000-11-08 Brooklyn NYC
·Verizon Online DSL
| reply to fantomposter said by fantomposter :
Spammer controls his domain. He can set up DNS and SPF any way he wants to point to any machine he wants.
Any machine with an A record within his domain.
said by fantomposter : So he lists the comcast trojaned machine as his domains mail server. And SPF fails.
He can't! He is not listed as authoritave for comcast IP's, he can use a redirect mechinism, but that does the oposite of what he wants.
My smtp server gets a connect from that trojened comcast machine, my server checks with COMCAST DNS for spf, not his DNS...
Think of SPF as an extension of MX. Only a list of a domains allowed "sending" servers instead of receiving servers (MX).
Spammer is toast! -- Motor Vessel - Tamara B. - 43' Long-Range Trawler Cape Elizebeth ME.»www.tamara-b.org
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 fantomposter Phantom Poster Premium join:2002-09-21 Independence, OH
| reply to TamaraB said by TamaraB :
Nope! SPF forces all mail from a domain to come ONLY from the allowed (SPF'd) domain's mail servers, which are advertised only by that domain's listed DNS servers. Spammer Fails!
Hopefully you are still here, I did not check this thread recently. been a busy weekend.
Spammer controls his domain. He can set up DNS and SPF any way he wants to point to any machine he wants.
So he lists the comcast trojaned machine as his domains mail server. And SPF fails. |
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  nixen Rockin' the Boxen Premium join:2002-10-04 Alexandria, VA
·Cox HSI
·Speakeasy
| reply to jjoshua said by jjoshua : This would mostly be an inconvenience for people who don't send SPAM. A lot of people use 3rd party email services because we don't want to use the one provided by our ISP for various reasons.
This is a TIRED argument. Third-party relay providers can simply set up TLS-protected, authenticated SMTP relay service on an alternate port.
-tom -- "There are 10 types of people in the world... those who understand binary and those who don't." "That's only 2 types of people, moron" |
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  TamaraB Question The Current Paradigm Premium join:2000-11-08 Brooklyn NYC
·Verizon Online DSL
| reply to fantomposter said by fantomposter :
Spammer sets up his throw away domain. Puts up DNS for it at a place where it can be changed easily and quickly.
He finds a trojaned Comcast machine to use. He changes his DNS file to show the proper SPF record for that Comcast machines IP addy.
No-Good! the SPF must reside on his domain, and point to a mail server on his domain... No receiving SPF/SMTP server will ever query his spf record for mail originating from a comcast addy, it will query comcast's spf records, and reject the mail. Spammer Fails!
said by fantomposter : Then he fires his spamm off from that machine and SPF stops nothing because he controls the domain and the SPF records.
Spammer can't control comcast's SPF records, in the same way he can't control their PTR records! Spammer FAILS!
said by fantomposter : Rinse-Lather-Repeat. SPF only stops someone from using my or your address as a forged from, and it stops the virus that use forged froms.
Nope! SPF forces all mail from a domain to come ONLY from the allowed (SPF'd) domain's mail servers, which are advertised only by that domain's listed DNS servers. Spammer Fails!
said by fantomposter : It will not stop spam nor will it slow it down much.
If implemented net-wide it will kill almost ALL spam. That which is left, will only come from spammer-owned/SPF'd domains. These domains will be easy to identify and block on site; black-lists will only have to deal with direct spammer domains. Spammer is toast!
Bob -- Motor Vessel - Tamara B. - 43' Long-Range Trawler Cape Elizebeth ME.»www.tamara-b.org
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 fantomposter Phantom Poster Premium join:2002-09-21 Independence, OH
1 edit | reply to ParanoiaInc
Spammer sets up his throw away domain. Puts up DNS for it at a place where it can be changed easily and quickly.
He finds a trojaned Comcast machine to use. He changes his DNS file to show the proper SPF record for that Comcast machines IP addy.
Then he fires his spamm off from that machine and SPF stops nothing because he controls the domain and the SPF records.
Rinse-Lather-Repeat. SPF only stops someone from using my or your address as a forged from, and it stops the virus that use forged froms.
It will not stop spam nor will it slow it down much. |
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  coward
@pacbell.n | reply to jjoshua tough - i'm sick of spam, and i'm even more sick about spam from bogus email addresses. true, some jerks have ruined it for the rest of us, but we all learned to deal with things like that when we were 6 years old.. |
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  jjoshua Premium join:2001-06-01 Scotch Plains, NJ | reply to ParanoiaInc This would mostly be an inconvenience for people who don't send SPAM. A lot of people use 3rd party email services because we don't want to use the one provided by our ISP for various reasons. |
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 ParanoiaInc
join:2002-08-28 Tucker, GA | reply to keyboard5684 I would think that by only allowing subscribers to send out email through the ISP's authenticating-email servers (block port 25), and disallowing subscriber-centered email servers, this could help address the problem. |
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 Megladon13
join:2003-09-05 Minneapolis, MN | reply to fantomposter ...and right now thats about 99% of the spam we are all getting. |
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 fantomposter Phantom Poster Premium join:2002-09-21 Independence, OH
| reply to keyboard5684 said by keyboard5684 : The problem is not authenticating clients that use SMTP, the problem is authenticating email servers.
Exactly. And SPF does not stop spam, it stops forged from addresses. Nothing more. |
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 keyboard5684
join:2001-08-01 Youngsville, PA
·Teliax VOIP
·WestPAnet Inc.
·WestPAnet Inc. CA..
| reply to ParanoiaInc The problem is not authenticating clients that use SMTP, the problem is authenticating email servers. For example, a client sending mail can authenticate with there ISP's mail server to send mail but how do we authenticate that ISP's mail server when it send to the remote domain.
We could not possibly make up logins for every single mail server in the world so they all could communicate.
SPF addresses this in a good way. This way the domain provider themselves says what specific mail servers are allowed to send email with that from address. |
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