Thanks to all who replied. I decided to make a summary of the replies
as some of them were private.
On 8.X.2002 at 15:36 Anton Zinoviev wrote:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use lml.bas.bg as a relay. As a
result exim generates about 50Mb log files per hour. How I can
Thanks to all who replied. I decided to make a summary of the replies
as some of them were private.
On 8.X.2002 at 15:36 Anton Zinoviev wrote:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use lml.bas.bg as a relay. As a
result exim generates about 50Mb log files per hour. How I can
Hi!
Yesterday I received a report from ordb.org that the server I
administer (lml.bas.bg) is an open relay. This information was used
immediately by spammers. I was able to close the relay a few hours
latter. I have some questions regarding this:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use
Anton Zinoviev [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use lml.bas.bg as a relay. As a
result exim generates about 50Mb log files per hour. How I can stop
exim from logging messages like refused relay to ...?
Any patterns in the attackers? One of the
On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 03:36:15PM +0300, Anton Zinoviev wrote:
Hi!
Yesterday I received a report from ordb.org that the server I
administer (lml.bas.bg) is an open relay. This information was used
immediately by spammers. I was able to close the relay a few hours
latter. I have some
Hi.
Anton Zinoviev wrote:
3. In the log-files of exim I have a huge list of e-mail addresses
of spammers (such as [EMAIL PROTECTED]). Can I do something
useful with them?
As they most possibly are forged: no. Drop them in the dustbin and
forget about them. It is not worth
Hi!
Yesterday I received a report from ordb.org that the server I
administer (lml.bas.bg) is an open relay. This information was used
immediately by spammers. I was able to close the relay a few hours
latter. I have some questions regarding this:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use
Anton Zinoviev [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
1. The spammers continue attempts to use lml.bas.bg as a relay. As a
result exim generates about 50Mb log files per hour. How I can stop
exim from logging messages like refused relay to ...?
Any patterns in the attackers? One of the
On Tue, Oct 08, 2002 at 03:36:15PM +0300, Anton Zinoviev wrote:
Hi!
Yesterday I received a report from ordb.org that the server I
administer (lml.bas.bg) is an open relay. This information was used
immediately by spammers. I was able to close the relay a few hours
latter. I have some
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