Well, the old one step forward, one step back trick.
I isolated several IP addresses that were banging on it and I was
incorrect on the initial IP. Typo error. It was 59.x.x.x when I
looked a bit deeper and did some verification I discovered some of
our other clients were actually getting va
Orin,
It sounds like you are making progress, but I somewhat doubt that
blocking an entire Asian class A is going to do anything but mask the
issue at hand. I also strongly recommend not blocking an entire class A
since for the most part, address space is shared among different
countries, so
On Mar 24, 2006, at 12:45 PM, Orin Wells wrote:
It appears the cause for my imail jamming problem is a spam source
in Korea starting with the block 51.0.0.0
Until advised otherwise, I don't care if anyone ever receives
messages from this origin
If you know you don't want those ip packets
It appears the cause for my imail jamming problem is a spam source in
Korea starting with the block 51.0.0.0
Until advised otherwise, I don't care if anyone ever receives
messages from this origin so I have set up a blacklist using the following
59.0.0.0/8 Korean spammer
Per the Deculde docu
Scott has a nifty tool for this. Plug one of the numbers from the range into this URL
as shown:
http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/cidr.ch?ip=64.49.243.63
and a list appears. There are 2 columns seperated by the word "through." On the left
side of the word is the lower # of the range and on the
0.0.255.
George Kulman
Partner
Ridge Systems, L.L.C.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Steven
Cmajdalka
Sent: Sunday, September 29, 2002 8:31 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] IP Blocking Question? for a NewB
Hello.
How do
Hello.
How do I filter a range of IP addresses.
example, this one.
64.49.243.63mail46.thesuperspecialsales.com
64.49.243.115 mail110.thesuperspecialsales.com
I block one then they start using 115, do I have to make a entry for each ip?
Thanks
Steve.
---
[This E-mail was sca