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> SORBS on the highway to h...?, My latest experience with SORBS
nicejerk
post Jun 21 2004, 11:48 PM
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Hi you all,

Because of my latest experience with SORBS, I thought it could be interesting to have your comments on SORBS.

My story is, that one day I found out SORBES had blocklisted our mail server (only one of our customers mail servers seems to be using SORBS's blocklist). After some consultaion with the admin of the our server, I found out the reason for the blocklisting was, that a Link X-Change partner trying to contact the other sites' administrator, had accidentally sent mail to a Spam Trap and thereby caught and registered by SORBS. SORBS promptly blocklisted a span of IPs and, unfortunately, including ours.

In the quest of clearing our IP from the blocklist, I found out that SORBS will not do that under any circumstances, unless the Web Service Provider (WSP) pays a "fine" to SORBS. To me, that sounds like a pure extortion. Either SORBES should sell subscription to their services or have it for free, but not stab you in the back with something they call "a fine". I am highly suspicious about this "fine", and urged our WSP not to support this kind of business. Paying this "fine", would be like accepting and acknowledge the practice of "extortion". At least the way I see it.

To solve this issue, I wrote to the admin of the blocking mail server, explained to him the situation and got whitelisted at once. Case solved for us. But I wonder how many others are suffering because of SORBES?

If an admin of WEP can not have a constructive and problem solving dialouge with spam-preventing service provider, I can not see any grounds for supporting that particular spam-preventing service. Furthermore, if no one by principal, pays the so called "fine", then finally SORBES block list would contain most IP numers on the Internet and thereby become obsolete.

Our mail administrator has before worked closely together with f.ex. SpamCop, to successfully track down spammers and close their accounts. These are typical cases where professionals work together to solve matters.

Responsible blacklisting, includes a reasonable way to get delisted, and SORBS is not reasonable on this policy.

As from this, I can only recommend spamhaus.org and spamcop.net.

All this because of a one single mail to a wrong single address.
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Wazoo
post Jun 22 2004, 01:25 AM
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QUOTE
I found out the reason for the blocklisting was, that a Link X-Change partner trying to contact the other sites' administrator, had accidentally sent mail to a Spam Trap and thereby caught and registered by SORBS. SORBS promptly blocklisted a span of IPs and, unfortunately, including ours.

Can only note that both sides of the story are not reflected here. As I'm not involved with any of this, let me just point out that some of your story doesn't match the data provided at the SORBS site http://www.dnsbl.us.sorbs.net/Overview.html .. specifically the section labelled "Spam Database" .... one e-mail should not have triggered a "span of IPs" to be listed.

That the listing under this section is done manually does kind of suggest that perhaps the message sent by your Link-Xchange partner may not have been an obvious "non-spam" ... maybe this particular e-mail might stand a bit of inspection?

In the light of so many ISP admin's that don't seem to have a clue, I do find it interesting that you talked to one that can pinpoint the exact moment and cause of a specific event such as this. Might it be possible that upon recognizing this singular event, that perhaps this admin's attempts at getting unblocked was the source of the "continued spam from this address" and thus caused the expansion from a single IP to a range of IPs?

I'm making no accusations, passing no judgment, just pointing out that the total content of your query/story and the SORBS FAQ just doesn't match up 100%.
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Ralsky's Fatal Tumor
post Jun 22 2004, 07:55 AM
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QUOTE
accidentally sent mail to a Spam Trap


(IMG:style_emoticons/default/blink.gif)
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nicejerk
post Jun 22 2004, 09:44 AM
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Hi again and thanx for replies so far.

QUOTE
Can only note that both sides of the story are not reflected here. As I'm not involved with any of this, let me just point out that some of your story doesn't match the data provided at the SORBS site http://www.dnsbl.us.sorbs.net/Overview.html .. specifically the section labelled "Spam Database" .... one e-mail should not have triggered a "span of IPs" to be listed.

I agree with you, but it also says in FAQ, that you only get listed for 2 days. I might have misunderstood something there. Neither could I anywhere on SORBS site find anything written about the so called "fine". They are not revealing the essentials.

QUOTE
That the listing under this section is done manually does kind of suggest that perhaps the message sent by your Link-Xchange partner may not have been an obvious "non-spam" ... maybe this particular e-mail might stand a bit of inspection?

It was not my partner or am I involved in this in any way, that my mail server got blocked. Let me quote our mail administrator exactly:

QUOTE
The reason they blacklisted it is that a single user on your server sent a single e-mail (through his ISP, not through your server) to the wrong e-mail address when trying to contact the Webmaster of a site they do a link exchange with. The e-mail address he sent it to was a spam trap SORBS uses. They got his domain name from the e-mail, traced it back to your server, and blacklisted it


QUOTE
QUOTE 
accidentally sent mail to a Spam Trap

As long as there is traffic on the streets, you can expect accidents to happen, but there is no reason to punish the whole town for it. It's the humans that make mistakes, electronics/computers only fail.

Still, a penny for your thoughts.
nicejerk

This post has been edited by nicejerk: Jun 22 2004, 01:33 PM
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Chris Parker
post Jun 22 2004, 10:55 AM
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QUOTE(nicejerk @ Jun 22 2004, 07:44 AM)
Neither could I anywhere on SORBS site find anything written about the so called "fine". They are not revealing the essentials.

Um, just read the FAQ on the website... It's here.


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Wazoo
post Jun 22 2004, 11:27 AM
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QUOTE(Wazoo)
Can only note that both sides of the story are not reflected here. As I'm not involved with any of this, let me just point out that some of your story doesn't match the data provided at the SORBS site http://www.dnsbl.us.sorbs.net/Overview.html .. specifically the section labelled "Spam Database" .... one e-mail should not have triggered a "span of IPs" to be listed.

QUOTE
I agree with you, but it also says in FAQ, that you only get listed for 2 days. I might have misunderstood something there. Neither could I anywhere on SORBS site find anything written about the so called "fine". They are not revealing the essentials.

I'm going to have to disagree. In general, the above referenced FAQ pretty much states that an IP will be listed until it passes a retest, some dialog changes some status specifics, etc., etc. ... I have to tell you that the 2-day listing doesn't ring a bell for anyone other than the SpamCopDNSbl 48 hour max after the spew stops. The so called "fine" is documented on the URL I offered in my last post (also quoted once again in this one)

QUOTE
QUOTE
That the listing under this section is done manually does kind of suggest that perhaps the message sent by your Link-Xchange partner may not have been an obvious "non-spam" ... maybe this particular e-mail might stand a bit of inspection?

It was not my partner or am I involved in this in any way, apart from that my mail server got blocked. Let me quote our mail administrator exactly:

QUOTE
The reason they blacklisted it is that a single user on your server sent a single e-mail (through his ISP, not through your server) to the wrong e-mail address when trying to contact the Webmaster of a site they do a link exchange with. The e-mail address he sent it to was a spam trap SORBS uses. They got his domain name from the e-mail, traced it back to your server, and blacklisted it

That actually even sounds a bit sillier than your first presentation ... recall you first stated that a "whole range of IPs was blocked" .. now the story is a domain named was extracted from an e-mail (?), this domain was tracked to an IP (?) and then this specific IP was added to the BL. Just another small hint, the source of the incoming spamtrap e-mail would have been "tracked" via the source IP of the e-mail ... the alleged Domain wouldn't actually be tied in, unless the Domain did in fact use this specific e-mail server to send its traffic out. One can make the assumption here that there's a bit of detail lost in the various translations of the history of this event, perhaps explaining why some of this doesn't tally up to a nice round number.
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Merlyn
post Jun 22 2004, 12:30 PM
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QUOTE(nicejerk @ Jun 22 2004, 10:44 AM)
As long as there is traffic on the streets, you can expect accidents to happen, but there is no reason to punish the whole town for it. It's the humans that make mistakes, electronics/computers only fail.

Still, a penny for your thoughts.
nicejerk

Yes accidents happen on the streets but people do not pull their cars up in garages that don't belong to them and park their cars.


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People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoided!
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nicejerk
post Jun 22 2004, 12:43 PM
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Thank you Mr. Parker,

I apologize for not reading the "Spam Database FAQ" section, as I looked into the the "Frequently Asked Questions" to find hints on this "fine". The price is:
QUOTE
......, if you are really not a spammer, or you are truly reformed, de-listing is relatively easy. You pay US$50 to a charity or trust approved by, and not connected with, SORBS for each spam received relating to the listing (This is known and refered to as the SORBS 'fine')


Further down that page they state:
QUOTE
The 'fine' was created to stop spammers from quickly removing themselves from the database, it also has the side effect of reminding people the hard way that they are responsible for their own actions.

Putting an unpatched, unfirewalled Microsoft Windows® machine on the Internet is irresponsible in the highest degree, installing a proxy server and leaving it open for the world to use is both foolish and irresponsible, yet people are doing these things every day, and no one is telling them they can't or that it is wrong.

This statement refers to 90% of home Internet users, and by no means justifies their way of blocking or charging their fine. It looks like they are putting themselves in the place of an "Internet Police Squad", appointed by themselves. I wasn't aware of this, until I read the link.

From this moment on, I defenitely will not recommend SORBS.

And Wazoo:
I have no reason to doubt our mail server administrator as we have been working together for several months now. You can talk about sillyness, but I take it seriously when we get blocklisted by SORBES for someone elses mistake, but as I learn more about SORBES, the less I like it.

In your previous message you wrote:
QUOTE
That the listing under this section is done manually......

and now you add to it:
QUOTE
.....he source of the incoming spamtrap e-mail would have been "tracked" via the source IP of the e-mail ... the alleged Domain wouldn't actually be tied in, unless the Domain did in fact use this specific e-mail server to send its traffic out.....

I do not know the content of the e-mail in question, but SORBES might have used some info in the message, if they do things manually. But I suspect, talking link exchange, domain names/links might have appeard in the mail in question. But the more I read about SORBES, the more I think they may have used from that mail.

QUOTE
One can make the assumption here that there's a bit of detail lost in the various translations of the history of this event, perhaps explaining why some of this doesn't tally up to a nice round number

Well, your few lines here have helped a bit, thank you.

Still, a penny for your thoughts. Add it up. It's a help for everyone.

nicejerk

P.S. FYI: We are a garment manufacturer and SORBS's list got our attention because of unreasonable blocklisting, and I can not see anything positive/attractive/reasonable with their services or attitude.
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sommerfeld
post Jun 22 2004, 05:12 PM
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SORBS is a high collateral damage list. Folks who use it generally know this and use it *for that reason*.

With regard to your objections to their comments about windows, I have to disagree: Given how easy it is to run windows update, putting a system running *unpatched* windows on the internet is a violation of hygene roughly comparable to leaving out backflow preventers when hooking your house up to your local water/sewage systems.
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nicejerk
post Jun 23 2004, 12:05 AM
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Hi again,

QUOTE
With regard to your objections to their comments about windows.....

I have no objections to their comments on Windows, that's only the plain truth they write there. But SORBS uses that excuse to appearingly appoint themselves as the WWW Sherif, to justify their unreasonable actions where they block a span of IPs (perhaps permanently) caused by a single mistake. They expect you to pay a "fine" for getting delisted, which looks to me, is more like extortion.

More from SORBS Spam FAQ:
QUOTE
.....also has the side effect of reminding people the hard way that they are responsible for their own actions.

Sure, they really want to teach the home user a lesson the hard way and you have to bring your wallet. We are all responsible for our actions, but that does not mean SORBS is allowed to act unreasonably, when a user makes a mistake.

Of course, Windows vulnerablilities seem to be the main cause of virus/worm attacks on the Internet, but then we are diverting from the main thread regarding SORBS and its blocklistings and methods.

I totally agree with SORBS about Windows. Windows versions until Winsk3, have had the goal of making it as easy as possible for any layman to experience multimedia and work in ever better ways. That perspective leaves Windows very vulnerable just after installation (until Win2k3 and WinXP SP2). It leaves all services running and ports open. You have to be pretty clever to shut down unessesary and vulnerable services and ports, and you can not expect the average home user to know how to do that. Microsoft could have compensated their products by offering a free firewall (comparable to that in Win2k3) to all windows users. But then, one has to understand that despite an action like that, people will still wonder "why on earth they need that". SORBS claims they are "teaching the Internet user a lesson" and "fining" the user. You judge their method for yourself.

With Windows on more than 90% of all computers in the world, it's almost not worth writing a virus targetting other OS. As Linux is growing, it will be interesting to see if virus/worm/hijacks attacks will target that OS more in the future. You never know vulnerability before you stumble into it, so only time can tell.

If SORBS were sincere and concerned about Windows vulnerability, as they write themselves, they might have added a section to their site and advice on online virus scanning sevices, excellent freeware like Spybot and Spywareblaster which makes surfing the Internet easier and safer, and other higly useful tools. But I guess they are too busy "teaching the lessons".

I personally didn't know much about Spam Trap before this incident, but I clearly see that it is a double edged sword. Users of Spam Trap certainly have a great responsibility in making it work as intended, to avoid accidents.
QUOTE
SORBS is a high collateral damage list. Folks who use it generally know this and use it *for that reason*.
A good point, as users of the list realize that mistakes happen, and they respond to that accordingly. In our case, I provided the administrator of the mail server, blocking ours, with IP no, service proivders name and the cause of blocklisting. The admin could then look up the IP, and really verify that the provided IP no was not listed anywhere else, and the service provider is well respected.

Still, a penny for your thoughts.
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StevenUnderwood
post Jun 23 2004, 02:44 AM
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QUOTE
to justify their unreasonable actions where they block a span of IPs (perhaps permanently) caused by a single mistake.


Without an IP address for specifics, I am just talking generalities, but IIUC, a SINGLE mistake will not block a span of IP's.

Please prove me wrong with a specific case.


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Miss Betsy
post Jun 23 2004, 06:24 AM
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QUOTE
Still, a penny for your thoughts.

In the offline world, if one does not build according to code or doesn't drive according to traffic laws (or in some places, if their vehicle doesn't measure up to certain standards), one gets a fine if caught.

Laws that would impose fines are not possible on the internet because of its international use. If SORBS thinks that a 'fine' would make people sit up and take notice, IMHO, it is not 'extortion'

Blocklists are not mandatory to be used. If SORBS actually has a lot of false positives (in the meaning that that IP address never sent spam) and doesn't delist, then admins will stop using it.

Ignorance is no excuse in a legal court. And it does not stop bad things from happening to people in the real world. Why should the internet be different?

My $.02 USD

Miss Betsy


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nicejerk
post Jun 23 2004, 10:42 AM
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Hi once again,

I've spent some more time on studying SORBS and I am putting my conclusion down in words. I will post it here in 2-3 hours. My conclusion is based on information on this thread, my experience with SORBS and SORBS' official web site.

QUOTE
Without an IP address for specifics, I am just talking generalities, but IIUC, a SINGLE mistake will not block a span of IP's.

Please prove me wrong with a specific case

SORBS is SORBS, and it really is a question if they need any more than a single mistake. In our case, I felt their blocklisting even without a single mail. Please read my conclusion later on, as you might get a different view of SORBS. As with an actual sample, I will have to consult with our mail administrator. I do not wish to reveal any IPs to any non-concerned 3rd party member, but if the administrator agrees, I can have him contact you directly. If you work for spamcop, tracking down spammers, you might have worked with this person before.

QUOTE
Ignorance is no excuse in a legal court. And it does not stop bad things from happening to people in the real world. Why should the internet be different?

Good point. Should it be any different? Enron was a scandal, Anderson Revising also, so why not SORBS? Where does responsibility start/end or ignorance for that sake? We can endlessly keep on comparing and question, and that is keeping us scepticle, which makes us look for answers but finally you have to come to some kind of conclusion. Thank you for your .2. It will all add up.

I started this thread because of attitude, policy and lack of cooperation from SORBS. I wanted to hear more experiences and replies from you that could help me finding a explanation/solution to their do-not-want-to-communicate-kind-of-problem. Mr. Chris Parker pointed out a page/site, containing information I was looking for, but on the very same page I read something more interestin, which led me to something more etc. etc.

Today, I felt the pieces fell into place. I can better understand SORBS now, when I have it puzzeld together. I can not help concidering SORBS as a spammer, and I wonder if there are any official papers on that company (investigation/claims/legal issues)?

More pennies/cents for more thoughts.
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StevenUnderwood
post Jun 23 2004, 11:30 AM
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QUOTE
If you work for spamcop, tracking down spammers, you might have worked with this person before.


I am not an employee of spamcop. Almost everyone you will run into here is simply another user of the spamcop services who is trying to help fellow users work through their problems.


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nicejerk
post Jun 23 2004, 01:30 PM
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Thank you all for your replies.

Sometimes it is necessary to write things down to get a clear picture of happenings. That is why I started this thread and now I am writing my conclusion about SORBS. My conclusion is based on information posted in this thread, my experience with SORBS, some replies from SORBS to inquiries regarding delisting and information posted on SORBS' official web site (General Q&A and Spam DB FAQ, http://www.dnsbl.us.sorbs.net/Overview.html ). I was doing this observation for myself in the beginning, but I must say, it could be interesting read for many more people. But here it is:

After being blocklisted by SORBS and then learning more about SORBS, their blocklisting methods, their way of handling cases, avoiding constructive dialogs and problem solving strategies, I have come to the conclusion, that SORBS is actually running a clever spam service, and probably earning pretty good on that. My opinion is, that some Internet Authority ought to look at the practices of SORBS on the Internet and comment on that. What SORBS has been doing to our business in the last couple of days, is a clean 100% spam, and SORBS uses extortion methods to get one delisted from their blocklists. It is also disturbing that SORBS can blocklist permanently a span of IP # (also even if they just feel like it, see ad. 7. below), but then of course, the use of their lists is on voluntary basis, which limits the consequences of damage.

Let me somewhat explain this a bit:
1. What I can read from SORBS´site, they claimed themselves as to be the www Sheriff, as that would justify their business strategy and assure customers of their intended reliable business.

2. SORBS runs a DNS blocklisting service, for administrators to use in blocking "other" spammers, but SORBS. A clever move which, at the same time guarantees successful operation for some time to come. Ad 1 and ad 2 make the floor plan for the business.

3. SORBS launches a product like Spam Trap, that will bring them "honestly earned money" by blocklisting/delisting. The reason for getting on to their list, they write themselves:

QUOTE
Well there are a few possibilities:
You are a spammer who has spammed a SORBS spamtrap or admin.
You are hosting DNS, webservices or mailservers (etc) for a spammer that has spammed a SORBS spamtrap or admin.
You are an innocent party that has been included in a wider listing policy because your provider is happy to host spammer(s) that have spammed a SORBS spamtrap or admin.¹
You had your machine hijacked by one or more spammers who have spammed a SORBS spamtrap or admin.
You have a machine with a virus or trojan that has spammed a SORBS spamtrap or admin.
You run an unsecure mailing list that has been used to spam a SORBS spamtrap or admin.
You inherited the netblock or address after your provider moved a spammer.

SORBS will not delist you without paying the 'fine' for any of these reasons.

This simply confirms, that SORBS blocklists a span of IPs, and they will not let one off the hook, once there is a bite. No matter by mistake or not. Basta. I our case, I think paying US$50,- for nothing we have done, is US$50,- too much. Is this a typical sample on how SORBS works/thrives? As SORBS knows, many citizens will pay that money to an organization, if users didn't know any better. I have asked a few people, and they would pay this amount without hesitating, if they thought a virus or worm in their PC may have triggered the event of being blocklisted. Those are the typical home users, SORBS is pretending to protect/teach a lesson. This is taking advantage of people, lacking the knowledge SORBS is referring to. There is a law against this kind of fraud in some countries, protecting civilians. SORBS is a scam spam company, and I can not see any indication on anything else. It sure is fine to block a spammer, but blocking 100 innocent and 1 spammer, brings big money to SORBS. This is really knowing how to run a business, and let innocent home users pay SORBS for delisting IP addresses, SORBS itself chooses to blocklist. SORBS should work with Service providers to track down spammers and lock them out, like professionals do. But I seriously doubt they have the quality of mind for that.

4. Mails, SORBS receives by Spam Trap, SORBS will by no means want to miss at least the US$50,-. In order to raise the chance for receiving payment, SORBS presses Service Providers to pay the "fine". SORBS does that by blocklisting a span of IP numbers disposable by the Service Provider. SORBS must be the biggest and longest living spammer I have come across until now.

5. To make things look more responsible for visitors, on SORBES site they use a phrase like
QUOTE
Putting an unpatched, unfirewalled Microsoft Windows® machine on the Internet is irresponsible in the highest degree, installing a proxy server and leaving it open for the world to use is both foolish and irresponsible, yet people are doing these things every day, and no one is telling them they can't or that it is wrong.
, so SORBS decides what is right and what is wrong for the home users and even when to pay. SORBS is going to catch the wrong-doers and teach them a lesson! Kind of thinking, like that in Germany in the 1930's.

6. Phishy payments? Reading the "How to Pay" is a fun section. After "discouraging" the payee to pay to charity (mentions unrefundable and long delisting time) then at the bottom of the page "encourages" (delisting within 24 hours) SORBS write:
QUOTE
Payment here is usually immediate, and delisting is performed usually within 24 hours.

Payment maybe made via PayPal, to: joey[at]vtgts.com

For those unfamiliar:
Goto: http://www.paypal.com/
Click the 'Send Money' tab.
Create an account (if you don't already have one)
Make payment of US$50 to joey[at]vtgts.com stating the IP address in the information field.
Note: It is very important you list the IP address you want delisted in the information field, without it we will not be able to match the payment to database entry.

Note: Joey McNicol has no connection with SORBS, he has not control over who is listed or delisted, complaining to him about an entry will fall not get you anywhere.

The Joey McNicol Legal Defense Fund is a good cause that SORBS supports.

Notice especially the
QUOTE
Payment maybe made via PayPal, to: joey[at]vtgts.com  ..... Note: Joey McNicol has no connection with SORBS, he has not control over who is listed or delisted, complaining to him about an entry will fall not get you anywhere.

My question here, why pay to Joey to get delisted at SORBS, if he has no connection whatsoever to SORBS? Is Joey on the way to jail? Or is Matthew Sullivan in deep trouble? Or is it just a sick joke?

7. To really convince doubtful minds, like mine, about the legitimacy of SORBS' business, SORBS writes in the General Q&A section:
QUOTE
29: I'm going to sue you if you don't remove "X.X.X.X" entry... 
See you in court, and don't expect to be removed... Oh, and expect to have your name and addresses published for the world to see (as is the Law in Australia provides).... No matter what the outcome.

Not only is this a threat of never being removed from the blocklist, but it is a threat of publishing names and addresses, with unforeseen consequences.

This phrasing is way out over my understanding and that any decent company on this planet, would ever use a service from a company, with statements like the ones I have quoted above, directly from SORBS´ site.

Furthermore, when you read some of the replies to people from SORBS, trying to get delisted at SORBS, the language used in SORBS´replies is impatient, arrogant and respectless towards the querier. Once again I am stunned.

We all know, that there is a comparison standard like Common Practice within blablabla and Common Practice in blebleble and so on. We even ourselves use “our own Common Practice”, because we think it´s better than the Accepted Common Practice. But the practice of SORBS is non sociable, non acceptable, non common, non resolvable, non anything.

I have some more points to add, but this SORBS is too obscure for any further listing.

Please comment on my conclusion. I could be terribly wrong, but on the contrary, I also might have hit the bulls eye.

This post has been edited by nicejerk: Jun 23 2004, 01:37 PM
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Merlyn
post Jun 23 2004, 01:56 PM
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Makes perfect sense.

Have your ISP pay the fine which will be used in a way they seem fit or stay listed.

You can cry and complain forever but it is not going to change things.


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nicejerk
post Jun 23 2004, 02:06 PM
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Well Merlyn,

Good to see you have a good sense of humor.

But on the other hand???
Do you believe in the survival of "service" provider like SORBS? My bet they will be extinct.

Our service provider offered us to move our site and services to a clean IP # (not blocklisted by SORBS). As we solved our problem with direct contact to the administrator of the blocking mail server, we currently have no problem. I do not expect any major problem in the future with SORBS, as I can not see how Internet users continue to support unethical activity of this kind.

This post has been edited by nicejerk: Jun 23 2004, 02:13 PM
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Ralsky's Fatal Tumor
post Jun 23 2004, 03:18 PM
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[quote=nicejerk,Jun 23 2004, 01:30 PM]Please comment on my conclusion. I could be terribly wrong, but on the contrary, I also might have hit the bulls eye.[/quote]

Okay...

[quote]I have come to the conclusion, that SORBS is actually running a clever spam service, and probably earning pretty good on that.[/quote]

I don't think you really know what spam is. And...

[quote=SORBS]SORBS is a Non-Profit entity that relies soley on donations to operate. There are no assets, nor any debts.[/quote]


[quote]What SORBS has been doing to our business in the last couple of days, is a clean 100% spam,[/quote]

Nope. You definitely don't know what spam is.

[quote]and SORBS uses extortion methods to get one delisted from their blocklists.[/quote]

Harsh methods, but not extortion at all. SORBS is a non-profit and has no income. All fees paid go to unrelated charities that return no money to SORBS.

[quote]It is also disturbing that SORBS can blocklist permanently a span of IP #[/quote]

I can do the same thing. So can you. So can anyone. You can make a blocklist on a computer that isn't even connected to the net. The trick is to get people to realize that your blocklist is 1) useful, and 2) trustworthy. Many people believe that about SORBS, which is why it gets used. Remember, SORBS does not block anything! Server administrators who use and trust SORBS use the SORBS lists so that they can block spam. If the owner of the system you sent mail to didn't trust SORBS, your mail would have made it.


[quote]but then of course, the use of their lists is on voluntary basis, which limits the consequences of damage.[/quote]

True, but not all of us consider it damage.


[quote]2. SORBS runs a DNS blocklisting service, for administrators to use in blocking "other" spammers, but SORBS.[/quote]

Again, your grasp of the whole spam concept is shaky.


[quote]3. SORBS launches a product like Spam Trap, that will bring them "honestly earned money" by blocklisting/delisting.[/quote]

Spam traps are not products. They are email addresses that have no reason to be used. Any mail coming to a spam trap is uninvited and fair game.


[quote]This simply confirms, that SORBS blocklists a span of IPs, and they will not let one off the hook, once there is a bite. No matter by mistake or not.[/quote]

Yes, they are extremely harsh. I haven't done enough research to see if a single email can actually get you listed and as far as I can tell you haven't proved that, so I remain in the air over whether or not they are too harsh.


[quote]Those are the typical home users, SORBS is pretending to protect/teach a lesson. This is taking advantage of people, lacking the knowledge SORBS is referring to.[/quote]

There are many, many other resources to teach home users not to run open mail servers and how not to get infected with spam-sending viruses. People who don't learn how to safely navigate the net and end up spewing millions of mails into my inbox are taking advantage of me.
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StevenUnderwood
post Jun 23 2004, 05:25 PM
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QUOTE
Those are the typical home users, SORBS is pretending to protect/teach a lesson. This is taking advantage of people, lacking the knowledge SORBS is referring to.


The typical home user will never see a block because they are using their ISP's server to send the mail and not sending directly. They can stay on the list indefinietly without affecting their service. There is another bl that specifically lists dial-up and dhcp broadband address space. The ISP's themselves place many of those requests so their clients can not spam the world.

Most SMTP software using blocklists only scan the connecting server. The spamcop email service does scan on every IP in the chain and would affect these types of users.

This post has been edited by StevenUnderwood: Jun 23 2004, 05:27 PM


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nicejerk
post Jun 23 2004, 10:25 PM
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Hi once more and thank you for your replies so far.

QUOTE
QUOTE 
What SORBS has been doing to our business in the last couple of days, is a clean 100% spam,



Nope. You definitely don't know what spam is.

I guess your defentition of spam is something like "unsolicited usually commercial E-mail sent to a large number of addresses". My defenition is somewhat like "To abuse any network service or tool by for promotional purposes or annoyance". By blocklisting our IP#, SORBS prevented us from communicating with some customers via e-mail. That is just as much spam as receiving "unsolicited commercial e-mail" or even worse.

QUOTE
QUOTE (SORBS)
SORBS is a Non-Profit entity that relies soley on donations to operate. There are no assets, nor any debts.

Hehe. Do you really expect me to belive that? Read their site again.

QUOTE
QUOTE 
This simply confirms, that SORBS blocklists a span of IPs, and they will not let one off the hook, once there is a bite. No matter by mistake or not.

Yes, they are extremely harsh. I haven't done enough research to see if a single email can actually get you listed and as far as I can tell you haven't proved that, so I remain in the air over whether or not they are too harsh
I think you should do more study on SORBS.

QUOTE
QUOTE 
Those are the typical home users, SORBS is pretending to protect/teach a lesson. This is taking advantage of people, lacking the knowledge SORBS is referring to.



There are many, ......... are taking advantage of me.
Guess who is taking advantage of us and our services for the moment!


QUOTE
QUOTE 
Those are the typical home users, SORBS is pretending to protect/teach a lesson. This is taking advantage of people, lacking the knowledge SORBS is referring to.



The typical home user .......... the list indefinietly without affecting their service.
Good point. That also better explains that SORBS realizes that companies have the money, and perhaps will rather pay a "fine" to SORBS, as that might be the easiest solution, even though it's not the right one.
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