4 Dec
2003
4 Dec
'03
2:24 p.m.
Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
They have had this policy since several months now but it is still a "may" - and does give them a good excuse to take out large IP blocks that don't have proper reverse DNS assigned and emit a lot of spam.
As I understand it, they blacklist if an IP with no rDNS generates "some threshold of" complaints. Not just "no rDNS" by itself. We're doing something like that ourselves now. Covers about 25% of all of our spam with a .025% "would be blocked if we didn't whitelist" rate. Which is quite good. A simple "no rDNS" rule causes too much trouble with our overseas customers. I'm sure AOL discarded that idea for the same reason.