Agreed, they even list AS23456 , which is a reserved AS used for BGP32
routers to annouce themselves to BGP16 routers. (the BGP32 ASN is then
embedded in the payload of the BGP16 packet, which result that when this
BGP16 router then further annouce themselves to a BGP32 router, the real 32
bit ASN will unfold itself).

UCEprotect then list this reserved ASN, instead of unfolding the packet and
looking at the real payload, causing every BGP32 network which annouce BGP16
compatibility, to be listed in UCEPROTECT L3.

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org
[mailto:owner-postfix-us...@postfix.org] För li...@lazygranch.com
Skickat: den 24 oktober 2016 22:20
Till: postfix-users@postfix.org
Ämne: (Semi OT) RBL shakedown

If you use the uceprotect RBL, note that they are involved in a shakedown to
solicit money to be removed from their list. Much like spamrl, I'd suggest
not using them since they have an obvious false positive problem. 

http://www.uceprotect.net/en/rblcheck.php?ipr=107.170.248.198
Their own system shows my domain is not the same as the spammers domain.

Plenty of good RBLs out there. No uses feeding the criminals
(uceprotect) or the incompetent (spamrl).

Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature

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