I have lost my copy of the contact list for the NOCs. Can someone
supply the contact ingo for he.net?
This is probably as good a time as any to mention that we have just
inaugurated our ISPWL (dns-based ISP whitelist), the HISP. It's
relevant to this because members provide both standard
On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
If you're interested in reviewing the criteria for acceptance onto the
HISP (contained in a HISP license which, again, is free), contact me
off-list.
Gosh, didn't the AGIS lawyers once try to save the net? Licenses,
licenses, licenses.
There
On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
If you're interested in reviewing the criteria for acceptance onto
the HISP (contained in a HISP license which, again, is free),
contact me off-list.
Gosh, didn't the AGIS lawyers once try to save the net? Licenses,
licenses,
On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
Heh, I'm here not as a lawyer, but as CEO of Habeas. The HISP is a
companion to our HUL whitelist, which is a list of the IP addresses of
our customer/licensees (bulk mail guaranteed to be confirmed opt-
in), and our HIL (DNS blocklist of
I hope you've provisioned a bit more bandwidth onto your various DNS
servers that are handling your whiet/blacklists. About a 2 months ago
there seemed to be some sort of confusion where you took your HIL list
down, changed it's name and then changed it to zone-xfer only. Not a
lot of fun
Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
That query configuration in SpamAssassin was incorrect, and has been fixed
in 2.60. While I apologize that it caused you an inconvenience, it was in fact
set up like that without our knowledge. It was querying the HIL even if
there were no Habeas headers present
That query configuration in SpamAssassin was incorrect, and has been
fixed in 2.60. While I apologize that it caused you an
inconvenience, it was in fact set up like that without our
knowledge. It was querying the HIL even if there were no Habeas
headers present in the inbound email