IIRC, MAPS hasn't allowed free zone transfers for quite some time. Whether or not it's really "stolen" is for MAPS to think about and a judge to decide (if MAPS decides to go that route). The big problem with this is usa.net is saying "go complain to MAPS", but MAPS can't help. Obviously, they don't want people stealing it, or they wouldn't have removed the CIDR text version of the DUL from their web site. I don't have access to a zone file to check, but I suspect MAPS would have been setting a relatively small expire time on the zones so this sort of thing wouldn't happen without someone at usa.net editing the zone and making themselves a master for it. If they did that, why didn't they update their mail servers? The point is, if everyone creates their own DUL, and those DULs are poorly maintained and have no documented procedures for submissions and deletions, it's going to be a major PITA for network operators as their customers complain "this IP space is no good, it's in DULs all over the net, give me some virgin IP space." On Sat, 11 Aug 2001, Roy wrote:
They aren't stolen copies, They are the last secondary transfer of the dul domain before MAPS closed its servers up.
Roy Engehausen
jlewis@lewis.org wrote:
This is getting really annoying. It seems multiple large networks have stolen copies of the MAPS DUL (I wonder if this is the cause or an effect of MAPS going commercial?) which of course are not being kept in-sync with the real MAPS DUL. First it was Earthlink. Today's winner is usa.net.
<xxxxxx@usa.net> (reason: 550 Mail from 209.208.x.y refused. Please refer to http://mail-abuse.org/dul for an explanation.)
The address block in question above was removed from the DUL almost 2 weeks ago, but usa.net is still blocking mail from it today, and claiming that they're doing so via the MAPS DUL.
How many other networks have stolen copies of the DUL and either nobody maintaining their local copies or bogus sendmail reject messages pointing you to the wrong place (or no place) to get the problem fixed?
If you're going to run your own locally maintained email blacklist, at least get the rejection messages right and give out a correct URL for procedures on getting off your blacklist.
-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Jon Lewis *jlewis@lewis.org*| I route System Administrator | therefore you are Atlantic Net | _________ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_________
-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Jon Lewis *jlewis@lewis.org*| I route System Administrator | therefore you are Atlantic Net | _________ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_________