On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 9:16 AM, Jo Rhett <jrhett@netconsonance.com> wrote:
Yes, you've automated your report processing to the point you don't actually have to do any work.
The problem is... you aren't doing the work. You aren't stopping the offenders. That's the goal. Automation should be a tool to help you do the job better, not avoid doing the job at all.
And yes indeed, its a way for us to automate termination of spammers, and to discover other patterns (in signup methods / spam content etc) that we can use to update our filters. There's a whole lot of maawg best practices (some work in progress, on outbound abuse / webmail abuse) that deal with these issues. To others in this thread - If your feedback loops are actually very low volume - you are likely to find a higher percentage of person to person email. And you may not have a problem at all, in which case you can simply treat feedback loops as an irritant, or as an early warning mechanism in case something does go wrong. If on the other hand your loop traffic is actually high volume (thousands a day or more) then you probably do have a spam problem, and ARF is there to provide you near real time notification about such problems -- Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.lists@gmail.com)