<sigh> If you're a supporter, why the hell aren't you familiar with their policies, and why are you responding to messages you haven't read, or at least haven't read closely enough to retain? It is not necessary to spam anyone to test an open relay. If you don't understand how to test a mail server for open relaying without spamming anyone, then you don't know enough about SMTP to participate in this conversation. Once it's proven you've blocked them to hide open relays, you go into a manual block. No automated probes get moved anywhere, that's very specific in their FAQ, don't know where in the hell you got that idea. Once you're in a manual block you stay there until you convince somebody it's worth bothering to check you again. My original statement stands; listing somebody's entire address range just because they block you is wrong. Listing their mail servers because they blocked you and you verified that one or more was still open is *NOT* wrong. The former is lazy and results in blocking folks who don't deserve it. The latter doesn't scale well. You want your spam fix to be completely automatic? Tough shit, the world doesn't work that way. If you can't keep up with the necessary load to test all the sites that are trying to fool ORBS, then you deal with that problem. There are lots of solutions, I can think of two just right off the top of my head. Can you? P.S. I couldn't conceivably care less what NANOG archives have to say about the matter. Most of the posts on the subject are by people who are wrong. People who actually USE the service usually don't see emails from those folks. At 07:08 PM 1/13/2000 -0600, you wrote:
Ah. That scales wonderfully, and makes them the equivilent of roaming spammers. Great idea. I'm sure Alan and company will act on that right away.
You honestly think moving the automated probes from network to network is a good idea?
Perhaps you should read their FAQ before asking questions about their service.
Actually, I'm extremely familiar with their service; I'm a long-time supporter of ORBS.
Perhaps you should go back and read the NANOG archives for the multitude of times this subject has come up in the past.
The only way you can prevent them from having any means of testing you is:
Close your relay.
I wholeheartedly agree. What does this have to do with your original statement that ORBS has gone too far by manually listing address ranges which specifically block the relay probes?