26 Feb
2010
26 Feb
'10
10:15 p.m.
[ This discussion really should be on spam-l, not nanog. ] I'm not affiliated with Spamcop, however, it's well-known among those of us who work in this area that (a) Facebook has been spamming for quite some time and (b) they're not the only "social network" that's doing so. So it's not especially surprising that one or more DNSBLs/RHSBLs is/are listing them: they've earned it. Point of order, however: Spamcop blocks nothing. Mail system administrators who choose to use their resources may block or score or tag or ignore at their discretion. ---Rsk