Douglas Otis <dotis@mail-abuse.org> writes:
Agreed. But it will impact providers generating a large amount of bounce traffic, and some portion of spam sources that often start at lower priority MX records in an attempt to find backup servers without valid recipient information. In either case, this will not cause extraneous traffic to hit roots or ARPA.
if you're just trying to stop blowback from forged-source spam, and not trying to stop the spam itself, then some mechanism like an unreachable MX does seem called for. note that those approaches will cause queuing on the blowerbackers, rather than outright reject/die. other approaches that could cause outright reject/die would likely direct the blowback to the blowback postmasters, who are as innocent as the spam victims. i'm not sure there's a right way to do this in current SMTP. i used to think we could offer to verify that a piece of e-mail had come from us using some kind of semi-opaque H(message-id) scheme, but in studying it i found that as usual with spam the economic incentives are all backwards. -- Paul Vixie KI6YSY