Howdy,

Has anyone come up with a reverse DNS 'pattern' that one can employ that will 
prevent Senderbase from assigning a poor reputation to an entire /24 because 
they saw an email they didn't like from a single IP address?

We're an infrastructure provider, which means that we lease servers, etc to 
customers and everything we do uses static IPs.

Our current 'default (before the customer changes it)' is a 
x.x.x.x.static.domain.com, apparently Senderbase cannot look up CIDR boundaries 
in the RIR database (even though we spend a lot of time making sure that we 
publish the CIDR information) so they just assume that each 'offender' owns the 
entire /24 and they also consider any 'email' from the static.domain.com domain 
to be the 'same offender' (which is completely silly).

The other little annoyance about their system is that we assign CIDR blocks to 
users (almost always a /29) these CIDRs include IP addresses like the gateway 
address, the broadcast address, the network address, etc and the users may only 
use 2-3 of the IPs in the /29, but they expect us or the user to set a 'custom 
looking' reverse DNS on all of the IPs in the range. Originally, we were not 
putting any reverse DNS on our IPs until the customer requested it (or did it 
themselves via our system) but then we ran into problems with some RBLs that 
require reverse DNS on all IPs, and other RBLs that require matching forward 
and reverse DNS on all IPs. 

I've contacted Senderbase for advice on what specifically we need to do but 
they've been vague at best and I have even asked them for examples of companies 
who 'meet their specifications' but I wasn't given any.

I'm considering doing something like customerXXXXX.static.domain.com but then I 
can see other problems with that also.

Any advice?

-Drew


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