----- Original Message ----- From: "Dave Israel" <davei@algx.net> To: "McBurnett, Jim" <jmcburnett@msmgmt.com> Cc: "Jack Bates" <jbates@brightok.net>; "Mans Nilsson" <mansaxel@sunet.se>; <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2003 12:00 Subject: RE: Port blocking last resort in fight against virus
On 8/12/2003 at 12:40:19 -0400, McBurnett, Jim said:
who in there right mind would pass NB traffic in the wild?
That's the problem; not all customers are in their right mind. All they know is that it was working yesterday, and not today, because you blocked a port.
The question of port blocking for most sizable ISPs comes down to principle vs principle. One the one hand, you have the principle of network invisibility. You agreed to pass customer traffic, not pass judgement on it. If it's a valid IP packet, you'll deliver it. And you don't slow down or stop traffic because you're spending cycles examining packets.* That's what customers expect.
On the other hand, you have the principle of being a good network citizen. You try to keep your tables clean and your peers from flapping. You accept valid routes and inform your peers when you get invalid ones, so they have a chance to fix them. You are properly embarrassed when you find a spammer on your network or your name on the CIDR report. And you don't spew other people's networks with worm traffic. That is what other providers expect.
Port blocking is therefore a quandry: do you stick with your customer principle, or your provider principle? I think most of us weigh the damage of the attack vs the damage of losing the port, and make individual judgement calls. It would be nice if there were some central consensus on when to block ports; then individual providers wouldn't need to take abuse from customers or other networks when their judgement wasn't exactly the same as somebody else's.
Yes, some providers however react improperly to certain situations and do not listen to their paying customers. RCN in Chicago is one example. One day, they just started blocking outbound port 25 on their network. Now, I use other SMTP servers other than the RCN one. In my case, they're my servers and all I have to do is set up my SMTP to listen on an additional port. For others, they aren't so lucky and may have a legitimate gripe with them for censoring traffic. In the case of 135-139, no one who uses these ports legitimatly should have a need to use them "in the wild" unless in a tunnel. If a user came to me complaining about them being blocked, I would ask the user why they were using them incorrectly and would suggest safer ways to do the same task. So, being a good ISP is trying to accomodate the needs of as many customers as you can, while being a good net neighbor. This is not always easy.