I am interested in setting up these tests, are the files referenced below
the latest versions of each file?  If not, is it possible for me to get
updated versions?
 
DYNAMIC
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/dynamic/Dynamic_09-17-2003.txt


GIBBERISH and ANTIGIBBERISH (use in combination)
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberish/Gibberish_09-16-2003.txt
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberish/AntiGibberish_09-16-2003.tx
t


GIBBERISHSUB and ANTIGIBBERISHSUB (use in combination)
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberishsub/GibberishSub_09-15-2003.
txt
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberishsub/AntiGibberishSub_09-15-2
003.txt


OBFUSCATION
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/obfuscation/Obfuscation_09-14-2003c.t
xt

 
 
Regards,

Dan Horne, CCNA
Web Services Administrator
TAIS Web
Wilcox World Travel & Tours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Matthew Bramble
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2003 6:54 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] DYNAMIC - 09/17/2003 - A new filter to detect
IP'd reverse DNS entries


Ok, I've been testing this one for about a week with very positive results.
It's still a work in progress as far as exclusions go (candidates welcome),
but I have been using it with a good deal of success as is for the past
week.  The filter is called DYNAMIC and it can be downloaded at the
following location:


http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/dynamic/Dynamic_09-17-2003.txt

(Links to the most recent versions of the filters that I have been testing
are located at the bottom of this message.  I will put up some HTML soon to
help enable the process since I have noted a few people downloading older
versions from older postings to this group)


What the DYNAMIC filter does is detect E-mail from a sender with a reverse
DNS lookup that has the tell-tale marks of being used for dial-up, DSL or
cable broadband access.  I have found it to be very useful in scoring spam
and it has a good impact on messages that don't fail many tests without
being responsible for rejecting messages due to false positives.  As an
extra added bonus, the use of the WHITELIST AUTH functionality that Scott
announced yesterday is beneficial to this filter's use (explained in the
file).

The method is a little controversial because it doesn't look for direct
signs of spam such as OBFUSCATION, GIBBERISH or GIBBERISHSUB, but instead
looks at where the message is coming from, knowing that dial-up, DSL and
cable broadband address space is becoming increasingly problematic for spam
origination, maybe due to recent virus outbreaks installing SMTP servers or
backdoors on always-on connected machines.  There are plenty of examples
where such space though hosts legitimate mail servers without customized
reverse DNS, typically being business users.  Declude's own servers should
trip this test if not whitelisted.  Therefore the scoring is low, however in
a recent thorough test of over 1,000 filter hits (excluding Declude of
course), the false positive rate was still only 2.0% of filter hits and
nothing failed because of this test alone.  Unlike the other filters that I
have recently been testing, this one doesn't tend to catch opt-in
advertising, just small-busuness false positives that have mostly properly
configured machines that score very low, so adding a few points to some of
them is of no real harm.

This test also often crosses over into DUL territory, especially the less
than pure EASYNET-DYNA blocklist.  Because of that, one should be careful to
adjust the scores so that a double hit won't fail a message alone.  I also
use SORBS-DUL which seems remarkably pure to the idea of being dynamic
addresses where mail servers aren't allowed to be hosted on, so I don't feel
there is any danger in having that test as a part of the mix.  Please see
the detailed comments in the filter file for more information on
configuration.  For those statistically inclined, I did a painstaking review
on 2 days of traffic in order to get an impression on exactly what the
impact was:



DYNAMIC FILTER STATISTICS
==================================================================
5,530 - Unique Incoming Messages
4,183 - Messages Rejected as Spam from All Filters (75.6% of Unique Incoming
Messages, approximate)
1,053 - Filter Hits (19% of Unique Incoming Messages)
==================================================================
1,032 - Positives (98.0% of Filter Hits)
   21 - False Positives (2.0% of Filter Hits)
=================================================================
   70 - Hits That Made a Difference* (6.6% of Filter Hits)
   23 - Spams Failed or at Least Scored Because of Filter (2.2% of Filter
Hits)
    0 - False Positives Failed Because of the Addition of This Filter (0.0%
of Filter Hits)


OTHER NOTABLES
==================================================================
  604 - EASYNET-DYNA & DYNAMIC Hits (57.4% of DYNAMIC Filter Hits)
   86 - SORBS-DUL & DYNAMIC Hits (8.2% of DYNAMIC Filter Hits)
    6 - Number of Spammers That Spoofed Local User (0.1% of Unique Messages)

*I define "Hits That Made a Difference" as spams that would have scored at
or below 150% of fail weight without test.  My scoring has improved immensly
with many new filters added, so default configurations should benefit much
more in this area.


APPROXIMATE EASYNET-DYNA COMPARATIVE STATISTICS*
===================================================================
 873 - Filter Hits (15.8% of Unique Incoming Messages)
===================================================================
 604 - EASYNET-DYNA Filter Hits in Common with DYNAMIC Filter (69.2% of
Filter Hits)
 369 - EASYNET-DYNA Filter Hits Not in Common with DYNAMIC FILTER (30.8% of
Filter Hits)
 449 - DYNAMIC Filter Hits Not in Common with EASYNET-DYNA (42.6% of Filter
Hits)

*Approximated because I wasn't capturing and instead assumed a similar
percentage of hits out of the total on Unique Incoming Mail as seen with the
DYNAMIC filter, and checked against all individually logged messaged.



Links to the most recent versions of all of the recent filters that I've
shared:



DYNAMIC
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/dynamic/Dynamic_09-17-2003.txt


GIBBERISH and ANTIGIBBERISH (use in combination)
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberish/Gibberish_09-16-2003.txt
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberish/AntiGibberish_09-16-2003.tx
t


GIBBERISHSUB and ANTIGIBBERISHSUB (use in combination)
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberishsub/GibberishSub_09-15-2003.
txt
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/gibberishsub/AntiGibberishSub_09-15-2
003.txt


OBFUSCATION
http://www.mailpure.com/decludefilters/obfuscation/Obfuscation_09-14-2003c.t
xt


  
Feedback is important, so please feel free to post a comment or send me an
E-mail even if you aren't sure about your conclusion.

Thanks,

Matt


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