Rich Kulawiec wrote:
On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 01:45:52AM -0400, Dan Collins wrote:
On Sat, Jul 30, 2011 at 12:43 AM, Michelle Sullivan <matthew@sorbs.net> wrote:
Emailing random non-existent email addresses (such as webmaster@sorbs.net) will earn you a listing...
webmaster@* isn't "random", it's a fairly standard way to reach the administrator of a service.
Per RFC 2142 section 5, it's the standard way to reach the administrator of the HTTP service, just as "hostmaster" is the standard way to reach the administrator of the DNS service. So you're both wrong: SORBS, since it has a web site, should support the "webmaster" address; and you shouldn't send traffic there unless your enquiry is about the web site (e.g., difficulty accessing it, broken links, malformed pages).
---rsk
Ok I'll accept that reference..I must admit I didn't know that RFC/STD existed so I learnt something today. ;-) I would like to point out though that in section 1 it states 'are encouraged to support' not must or even should, a quick skim read later and I see there are mention of those that are required to be supported later in the document, Webmaster@ is not in the required list. As per my previous email, the webservers (all of them) report another email address which is more appropriate for our organisation, and will feed all mail to a real person or into a ticket system in a queue for bugs and errors with the SORBS service as appropriate (this does not include any reports about content of the DNSbl, there are other addresses published for that.) Thanks, Michelle -- Vulnerabilities are weaknesses associated with an organisations assets that maybe exploited by a threat causing unwanted incidents. http://www.mhix.org/