On Dienstag, 1. Dezember 2009 Marc Perkel wrote:
> Every list is imperfect. In this case there were about 10 hits on the
>  hi MX record and they didn't use QUIT to close the connection.
>  Generally this indicates a virus. If they had used QUIT they
>  wouldn't have been listed. Although I try to keep the list perfect,
>  if an email server impersonates a spam bot then they are more likely
>  to get on the wrong lists.

We've had a lot of mail hosts of clients on hostkarma. During the last 
days, I had to remove these:

mtaout3.isp.ptt.rs[212.62.57.38]
(is an ISP, has mtaout1-4, so put all these on yellow)

mgate30.omv.com[193.186.185.30]
One of OMVs gates, a big oil company.

Don't know why they came on your list, you should check. At least for 
that OMV gate, the listing occured Nov 26. I don't remember the other.

I'm willing to use your hostkarma list, and keep the tarbaby on some of 
our domains so you can learn addresses. But currently there are *way* 
too many FPs. I'd prefer to have no FPs and more spam passing through, 
as FPs means work on my side, while spam is catched by the filters 
anyway. Reliability of any blacklist is much more determined by the FPs 
than by catched spam, IMO.

mfg zmi
-- 
// Michael Monnerie, Ing.BSc    -----      http://it-management.at
// Tel: 0660 / 415 6531                       .network.your.ideas.
//
// Wir haben zwei Häuser zu verkaufen:
// http://zmi.at/langegg/
// http://willhaben.at/iad/realestate/object?adId=15306857

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.

Reply via email to