Ill reply to your spf records issue as I have time.  I am not a fan of spf, so 
may be biased :)

My understanding of the spamtrap scenario with spamcop, for which they 
obviously give very little information to protect their system is that it is 
near impossible to accidentally hit a spamtrap.

Spam Trap addresses are in the format of 
fgahwe23232-complete-random-gibberish-that-is-really-l...@domain-that-is-not-associated-with-spamcop-at-all.example.com

So yes, someone could have scraped and gotten them in, in which case, facebook, 
twitter, gmail, and the rest all need special treatment within spamcop.

I have sent them an email asking for as much information s I can gain on this 
matter.  Hopefully they will reply with something useful.
-- 
Scott * If you contact me off list replace talklists@ with scott@ * 

On Jan 19, 2010, at 12:50 PM, K Post wrote:

> Yeah, there's something going on there for sure.
> 
> Here's one way that facebook could be sending to spamtraps:
> 
> First an account gets compromised.  Happens all of the time.  Then the
> hacker logs in and then sends invitations or messages to a list of
> addresses, that includes a spamtrap address


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Throughout its 18-year history, RSA Conference consistently attracts the
world's best and brightest in the field, creating opportunities for Conference
attendees to learn about information security's most important issues through
interactions with peers, luminaries and emerging and established companies.
http://p.sf.net/sfu/rsaconf-dev2dev
_______________________________________________
Assp-test mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/assp-test

Reply via email to