what the second line is for? if i block all first then why care about rest (which equals to none in such case) :) -- Tomas Daniska systems engineer Tronet Computer Networks Plynarenska 5, 829 75 Bratislava, Slovakia tel: +421 2 58224111, fax: +421 2 58224199 A transistor protected by a fast-acting fuse will protect the fuse by blowing first.
-----Original Message----- From: Martin Hannigan [mailto:hannigan@fugawi.net] Sent: 2. júla 2002 14:40 To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: AOL mail netblocks
Folks, is there still only a certain block of allowed addresses that send mail from AOL i.e. block smtp from any any and then allow 1.2.3.0/24 etc?
Thanks,
-M
Regards,
-- Martin Hannigan hannigan@fugawi.net Boston, MA http://www.fugawi.net
On Tue, 2 Jul 2002, Daniska Tomas wrote:
what the second line is for?
if i block all first then why care about rest (which equals to none in such case) :)
Obviously, I hope, the business realities of playing the spam game dictate that I can only control the spam, not stop it. I was hoping someone was going to say that "AOL already does this themselves". In the 'old' days, there was a list of what to allow under .ipt.aol.com. It's pretty easy for them to do it, and I'm guessing that they do actually filter this outbound, or their managed modem providers may, I'm just looking for a confirmation. -M
participants (2)
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Daniska Tomas
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Martin Hannigan