That's probably a better idea. I moved "into" a /24 ip block that was SWIPed to me that they reported was "dynamic cable/DSL users" (no spam history, mind you). Didn't matter, I couldn't send e-mail. When trying to get it delisted I had a TTL on the zone that was "incompatible" with their standards (for DR failover purposes) and was unwilling to maintain a TTL of how many ever hours they wanted as it didn't fit the company's requirements. I ended up just getting a new IP block from the ISP as they gave up on resolving it too. Kind of a waste, but it worked. I relocated to there instead. 1 year later they updated my ticket and delisted it. On Thu, Apr 5, 2012 at 11:45 AM, Nick Hilliard <nick@foobar.org> wrote:
On 05/04/2012 17:48, goemon@anime.net wrote:
But they will care about a /24.
I'm curious as to why they would want to stop at /24. If you're going to take the shotgun approach, why not blacklist the entire ASN?
Nick