At 07:34 PM 6/17/98 -0400, you wrote:
On Tue, Jun 16, 1998 at 12:51:07PM -0500, Derek Balling wrote:
I think that logic's faulty, too, Dean. The interim provider certainly has right of control over it's own equipment; if the provider feels that spam and such are impeding it's ability to provide such service, it is certainly within it's rights to fix the problem. If it's customers don't like this, it's certainly not impossible for it to move to another provider.
I would have to agree with this, but I would say that the caveat is that the ISP should notify the customer (somewhere, anywhere) that they use the RBL (or at least that the ISP reserves the right to block domains and/or hosts from connecting/sending to the mail server). It can be in the fine print of the multi-page AUP that the customer gets shoved under their nose, but it should be in there.
The agreement Paul Vixie makes RBL users sign states that EXPLICITLY. You are not allowed to use the RBL unless you disclose such use fully to your customers and/or downstreams.
"Makes"... makes how? I simply enabled it in my sendmail configs and ran with it. Didn't even SEE where it mentioned that I *HAD* to go agree to stuff. Now granted, in my case, its on my personal mail server and doesn't affect anyone anyways, but there needs to be more emphasis placed on this. A lot of people will know what the RBL is, and enable it in Sendmail, and it will work, and they won't have even visited Paul's site to read "the rules of the game" so to speak. Dunno what the solution is, but I can see a somewhat real problem here. Derek