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MAPS and Experian Settle Lawsuit

dbrower writes: "Experian is trumpeting a settlement with MAPS here, where MAPS agreed not to blackhole them without a court order, and agreed that Experian didn't need to do opt-in. Looks like a loss to me."

313 comments

  1. Today is a bad day for all email users by hillct · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Let there be no question about it. This is a victory for spammers. I hope MAPS elects to keep a list of companies which they are unable to block through their service. Then I could grok the list and be happy once again.

    --CTH

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
    1. Re:Today is a bad day for all email users by gol64738 · · Score: 1

      I hope MAPS elects to keep a list of companies which they are unable to block through their service.

      um, what would the difference be to Experian weather they're listed on a spam list, or listed on a list that aren't allowed to be listed on a spam list?

      answer? none whatsoever. lawyers? come back, we need you.

    2. Re:Today is a bad day for all email users by krogoth · · Score: 1

      I'll keep in mind to block Experian what I have the tools to filter email. This should let system administrators everywhere know that they should be blocked.

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    3. Re:Today is a bad day for all email users by Wavicle · · Score: 2
      The difference is that the black hole list is a list of hosts which you are specifically advised to block.

      The "we can't block these people because they took us to court" list is simply a voluntary disclosure. If MAPS is not advocating that they be blocked, it looks to me like they are within their settlement.

      The Lawyers can still come back, but at least MAPS would at this point have a chance of having the case dismissed before they had to defend themselves at great expense.

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    4. Re:Today is a bad day for all email users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blah. Press DELETE and stop complaining just like everyone else, you bleeding heart liberals.

  2. Advertising is Pollution by ewhac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...And spamming is the worst type of pollution; they make you pay for the sludge with your connectivity, time, and frustration.

    It would be interesting to know why MAPS decided to cave in. Perhaps a Slashdot interview is in order?

    I'd like to see MAPS publish a list of IPs it's forbidden to add to its main blocklist, so that we could manually add them to our MAPS config.

    Schwab

    1. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 3, Funny

      It would be interesting to know why MAPS decided to cave in.
      <HUMOR>
      Maybe they didn't want their credit rating trashed? ;-)
      </HUMOR>

      HUMOR tags have been added for the humor impaired, in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    2. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      hahahah ahahahahah eeeheheheheh heheh hehehehehehehehe hahahaha oh. my. god. hahahahah eeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahahahahahahahahah

      NO .

    3. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I've never had a problem with people spamming Hotmail accounts. They are only wasting Microsoft's bandwidth/storage space/processing time/etc. As for spamming other mail servers on the net, well that's just plain wrong!

    4. Re:Advertising is Pollution by dgreenwood · · Score: 3, Informative

      MAP's take on this is here
      EXACTIS SUIT AGAINST MAPS DISMISSED October 3, 2001 - REDWOOD CITY, CA - Mail Abuse Prevention System, LLC (MAPSSM) announced today that Experian Emarketing, Inc. (formerly Exactis.com) has dismissed all of the claims which it had previously filed against MAPSSM. "A settlement has been reached in which Experian has committed to requiring their clients to provide them with lists which contain only those email addresses for which they have obtained the addressee's permission to send them email", explained Anne P. Mitchell, Esq., MAPS'SM Director of Legal and Public Affairs. "They have further committed to address and resolve any complaints and concerns which may arise as a result of any mailings they do for either themselves or their clients."

    5. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Ace905 · · Score: 2

      Advertising may be pollution, but the greater evil is giving that kind of power to any single organization.

      Since so many companies voluntarily broke their own privacy agreements last week ; regardless of major media icons denouncing the American fight against Personal Freedoms - I think it's disgusting that normal people would volunteer their data be channelled through one organization ; no matter what that data is comprised of. Remember, the point of Encryption isn't to hide something illegal or immoral - it's to ensure privacy from corporate and Powerful-Organizations interests.

      Everyone arguing for personal freedoms through privacy quotes Hitler's choice to brand Jews with Stars, and everyone else says "that's too far fetched". How far fetched is the US Government performing keyword searches on all of your email? Now they actually admit to it.

      Eggplants!

      --

      Ace
    6. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Dwonis · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Advertising may be pollution, but the greater evil is giving that kind of power to any single organization.

      I'll give as much power as I want over MY MAIL SERVER to anyone I damn well please. Who are you to tell me I can't?

    7. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Ace905 · · Score: 2

      Whoa whoa there samurai cowboy, I'm a free individual to tell you not to do it. Welcome to the free world (Otherwise known as, 'Not just USA').

      I'm also free to say you can't, but I didn't.

      Eggplants!

      --

      Ace
    8. Re:Advertising is Pollution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "Americans with Disabilities" don't find this funny. And by "this", I don't mean the part that was enclosed in tags...

  3. Double opt-in? What the hell? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 0, Troll

    If I sign up for a mailing list, I should NOT have a bunch of nannys insisting that companies waste my time with another verification step.

    I appreciate that they are pushing for opt-in standards, but there is a very fine line between looking out for the rights of consumers and looking to "protect" consumers from themselves.

    Which do I hate more: people who want to exploit me, or people who want to coddle and protect me, whether I want it or not? Tough choice.

    I think I hate the coddlers more. I can always protect myself against exploitation, but I can't always get away from the nannys.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    1. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Think about what happens if someone else subscribes you to a mailing list with a high volume. Single opt-in means your mailbox starts getting filled up with mail without giving you any chance to avoid it. Do you really want to enable people to kill your e-mail easily by just signing you up for a few dozen multi-megabyte-per-day single-opt-in mailing lists?

    2. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may be a fine line, but double opt-in doesn't cross it. The simple fact is that anyone who has your email address (including spammers) can sign you up for anything else that uses single opt-in. Double opt-in is the *first* step that forces them to require verification that the person that owns the address actually did the opting.

      If email-origin checking was more secure/foolproof, you'd have a point. As easily as it can be forged, you don't.

    3. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by AndyS · · Score: 3, Informative

      If I don't sign up for a mailing list, I should not suffer hundreds and hundreds of spam from it.

      If I signed you up to 100 such mailing lists, would you rather get 100 verification mails that you could just delete, or 10,000 mails from the mailing lists that you'd have to unsubscribe from manually?

      The idea of double opt-in isn't designed to make people's lives inconvenient - all it needs is a quick reply. It's pretty easy, I do it all the time. You can even do it from a different e-mail address. However, it does protect those who suffer from massive mailbombing.

    4. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2, Troll

      Do you really want to enable people to kill your e-mail easily by just signing you up for a few dozen multi-megabyte-per-day single-opt-in mailing lists?

      Fine, if these theoretical multi-megabyte-per-day mailing lists are being abused in that way, then they can choose to be a double opt-in. But insisting that every mailing list in the world be a double opt-in or they get blacklisted is radical and absurd. That's when I start yelling "Whoa!!!!" and saying the "freedom fighters" have started looking like the "oppressors".

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    5. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by RollingThunder · · Score: 3, Offtopic

      I believe what they call "double opt-in", is this:

      You punch in an email address at the webform.
      Their system sends a confirmation email, with a token of some sort, to that address.
      You reply, with said token, and the address is confirmed and added to the list.

      It's not that hard, and it also allows you to get your ass off a list even if you don't send from that address any more - if you get the emails forwarded, it's all good.

      Now, if MAPS was demanding something more (and I half expect they may have, it seems to me they've been constantly increasing their requirements), that's unreasonable. But simply verifying that the stated account really wants on the list isn't a huge deal, nor is it hard for the user - AND it pays off for the sending servers, as they spend less time spinning their wheels on bogus/broken addresses.

    6. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fine, if these theoretical multi-megabyte-per-day mailing lists are being abused in that way, then they can choose to be a double opt-in. But insisting that every mailing list in the world be a double opt-in or they get blacklisted is radical and absurd."

      Start your own service that handles blocking or choose one of the alternative out there.

    7. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Yes, double opt-in is good. What's bad is MAPS taking it upon themselves to: 1) Make a "rule" that they think is "good for everyone" without any public debate or input, without any elected representation, without any authority whatsoever. 2) Enforce that "rule" without any accountability, oversight, or authority whatsoever.

      What government abdicated and left MAPS in charge? They're just a bunch of vigilanties and they will be run out of town just like the vigilanties of the Wild West. Hell, even those vigilanties could only spread their disease so far; MAPS tries to be global in scope. Hopefully we can get them labled the terrorists they are and get the FBI after them, too.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    8. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The realistic problem is that if spammers could claim legitimacy by being single opt-in, they'd just claim they got your address when you (or someone else) requested you be added. What, you want to be removed from their list? Sure no problem... *wink* *wink*

      Double opt-in is the only method that lets YOU as the user have a real way of saying yes or no and holding onto your own email address. Honestly, meaningful opt-in doesn't even start before double opt-in. And single opt-in can be WORSE than opt-out because of the pretended compliance scenario cited in the first paragraph.

    9. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by gol64738 · · Score: 2, Informative

      what? do you have any idea what you're talking about? obviously not.

      look, MAPS by itself affects no one. It's the ADMINS that make MAPS work. an ADMIN must implement the blackhole list via DNS or sendmail for anything to happen.

      don't you think that ADMINS know what's best for the network they control? you obviously know nothing about system administration, go crawl into a hole.

    10. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, yes. Someone else who forgets that aiding and abetting a crime is still a crime. Just because MAPS themselves don't do the actual blocking doesn't make their actions OK. If you'd like to provide a list of all the admins who use MAPS we can arrange to stop them as well.

    11. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by GryMor · · Score: 1

      MAPS is not in charge, MAPS only publishes an opinion.

      System administrators who agree with MAPS opinion are the only ones actually in control. They have to consciously choose to make their systems agree with MAPS opinion for the blackholing to work.

      It is the case that a system may drop anything they haven't agreed to transmit. How they go about making the decision on what they will and will not transmit is entirely up to them and the terms of the contracts they have with other people.

      What gives you the right to tell a sysadmin what they can and cannot block?

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    12. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by gol64738 · · Score: 1

      why go anonymous rick the red?
      an admin can do whatever they want to their own network segment.

      i'm the admin for a company. if my boss thinks people are spending their time shopping on ebay while at work, i can block ebay.
      by your argument, ebay should be able to sue my company. uh, ya. ok. whatever.

    13. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What gives you the right to tell a sysadmin what they can and cannot block?

      Because ISPs are lazy like everyone else. They will just trust that MAPS has not become corrupt.

      Put it this way: do you think Experian should be able to publish anything they want about a person regardless of accuracy? After all, banks have the choice whether to use Experian or not.

      This is actually pretty real world, because all three credit agencies suck when it comes to accuracy (which is not surprising when you have 150 million records). That's why they need government regulation because of the power they hold.

      Believe me, I am very anti-government regulation, but blacklists of any kind are very apt to be abusive.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    14. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      From your mailbox's point of view, there is no difference between getting subscribed to a single 1000 message a day list or 100 lists that are only 10 messages a day.

    15. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      i'm the admin for a company. if my boss thinks people are spending their time shopping on ebay while at work, i can block ebay. by your argument, ebay should be able to sue my company.


      Please explain how your boss filtering Internet access at work equates to you shutting down someone's email at home (which is what MAPS's list does -- it doesn't block internet access). I fail to see the connection.

    16. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by gol64738 · · Score: 1

      let me rephrase that:
      if ebay.com is sending so much mail to our employees that our employees are spending all day reading it, i'll block any incoming email from ebay. simple enough.

      does that work for you?

    17. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by ClarkEvans · · Score: 2

      If I sign up for a mailing list, I should NOT have a bunch of nannys insisting that companies waste my time with another verification step.

      Thus, "double-opt-in" is really just "single-opt-in". They've spun the words to mean something that they don't.

      These are the only steps which prevent spammers from mass-subscribing you to a mailing list that you don't want to be a part of. Think of it this way. I have a product. I pay a marketing firm $1.00 for every person whom the marketing firm gets on the mailing list. They can do this *legitamately* and actually convince people to sign themselves up... or ... more likely, they can just add 1000's of known e-mails to the sign-up list.

    18. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by wiZd0m · · Score: 1

      "Do you really want to enable people to kill your e-mail easily by just signing you up for a few dozen multi-megabyte-per-day single-opt-in mailing lists?"

      For a minute, I thought you were talking about Hotmail.

    19. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Jay+Carlson · · Score: 5, Informative
      That's fine if you're the one who actually signed up. Me, nop@nop.com, and my friend ben@ben.com, get truly fascinating spam by way of people who are enticed to give some email address in return for something; somewhat believably, people will use fake email addresses under duress.

      In addition to all the random female-depicting porn you're familiar with, I get aluminum market newsletters, British SMS-music-info-service announcements, and some very tasteful Swedish news mailings. Oh, and for a while nop@nop.com was listed as the contact address for a gay personals service ad in Portugal. The letters I got were very sweet, but my wife still thought it was funny...

      My favorite is when people buy unlock codes for commercial software, giving my email address. I've got a whole folder full of registration codes that I didn't pay for and will never use....

      Oh right, back to opt-in. So here's what's going on.

      • When spammers say "opt-in" they mean that at least somebody typed an email address into a web page somewhere.
      • When spammers say "double opt-in" they mean the horrible, onerous, business-destroying requirement to confirm that the person receiving mail at an email address wants to receive their mail. Anti-spammers prefer to call this "verified opt-in", and I like that term better, but it doesn't matter what you call it.
      So when somebody types nop@nop.com into the signup for Goatmail (intentionally goating me or not), a verified opt-in system sends nop@nop.com a message saying "hi! hit reply to this message to confirm and enter the wonderful world of goats!" With non-opt-in systems, I'm in Goatland without any further delay. Sort of like when my "friends" sent all the "I'm interested!" postal reply cards to the Navy recruiters AND the dental post-doc programs with my address on them. Took years to get rid of them.

      But I digress again. Here's the summary:

      • Unverified opt-in means someone wishes for an email address to receive spam.
      • Verified opt-in means the recipient of mail sent to an address wants spam.
      That clear things up?
    20. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by oldperson · · Score: 2, Informative
      Double opt-in is marketing speak from the DMA (that's Direct Marketing Association, a group which includes a number of mainstream corporations considering spam.)

      The term entered debate when Congress invited representatives of the DMA and MAPS to address a panel. It's been relentlessly pushed by the PR flacks and looks like it might be taking hold in the technical world as cybersquatting did. (Another spin term foisted into use by relentless marketing from the IP lobby.)

      The spinless and more acurate term is "opt in with confirmation." It doesn't include the false and spin-driven connotation that people have to sign up twice and it accurately describes what MAPS considers ideal.

      The DMA doesn't like "opt in with confirmation" because it polls much more favorably than "double opt-in" and they'd rather people used terms that favored their side of the debate.

    21. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by macdaddy · · Score: 2
      Put it this way: do you think Experian should be able to publish anything they want about a person regardless of accuracy?

      I don't want to waste my energy retyping what I put into a previous post so I'm going to provide the link to it so you can go read it. In short I believe MAPS is well within their right to publish their opinion. It is well within my right to take their opinion for gospel. We are all entitled to our opinion.

      DNS Blacklists aren't nearly abusive as my personal Sendmail access lists. Once a domains goes on it, there's no way off. I briefly investigate the spam. If an actual domain is associated with it, then that domain just earned a permanent REJECT entry. Simple really.

    22. Re:Double opt-in? What the hell? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2

      You don't get it. Why should that list use double opt-in? They're a list being run by someone like Experian who says "You did opt in. See, here's the request from you to be added.". You didn't send that request, but that's beside the point for them, they've got the request.

      So the malicious person who decided to get you's happy, you're getting spammed. The list operator's happy, he's got a new target free and clear. The only one who suffers is you, as legitimate e-mail to you goes into the bit bucket because the lists have filled up your mailbox with mail you didn't ask to get.

  4. winners or loosers? by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 5, Informative
    I have a hard time looking at MAPS vs. the spammers as us agsinst them anymore. For me this has turned into one of those moral dilemas wherein the actions taken by maps are nearly as deplorable as those they are attempting to defeat.

    Do not misunderstand, I am no sympathizer of the spammers. I do not think what they do warrants first ammendmend protection. However, I do not think that MAPS arbitrarily black holing companies who it cannot strong arm with threats really deserves our respect anymore.

    A good idea gone awry.

    Cheers,
    - RLJ

    1. Re:winners or loosers? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1, Troll
      Hooray! Someone at /. who gets it!

      I'd mod you up if I had the points. Had 'em last week, but not today. Damn.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:winners or loosers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As I understand it MAPS are just providing a list of IP's/Domain names from which SPAM is likely to come, it is still up to each individual sysadmin to use or not use that list. So I do not think it is fair to demonize MAPS in this way.

    3. Re:winners or loosers? by kinko · · Score: 1
      I have a hard time looking at MAPS vs. the spammers as us agsinst them anymore. For me this has turned into one of those moral dilemas wherein the actions taken by maps are nearly as deplorable as those they are attempting to defeat.


      This is (was...) my feeling on the old ORBS service that was based here in New Zealand. It shut down because two of the biggest ISPs in the country got court orders against it. Telecom, the ex-state monopoly, and ORBS didn't get on. Remember when everyone thought above.net was blackholing ORBS? It was Telecom "accidentally" listing BGP routes with low cost and then discarding the packets. And the guy running ORBS had a personal financial dispute with Telecom, and said something along the lines of <paraphrase>an attack on me is an attack on the ORBS service</paraphrase> and blackholed them for that!!!

      Anyway, now that MAPS is the incumbent, they want to make it a subscription-based service. As the parent comment says, the aims are laudable, but the methods are not. Eg, blackholing ALL IP traffic to a site based on spam email.

    4. Re:winners or loosers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What moral dilemma? The day I don't have the right to share or subscribe to a list that has IPs of people that I don't want to receive mail from is the day that my freedoms are taken away.

    5. Re:winners or loosers? by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 1
      Dear Mr. / Ms. Coward,

      You will note the opening of the sentence to which you respond begins with two words:

      "For me"

      This same meaning could be conveyed with the words, "as it pertains to me" or "my personal feeling on the matter" or how about "as it pertains to my opinion and my opinion alone not that I would dare suggest that you should have my opinion as well because individuality is really what makes us who we are, Mr Coward, and I would be a far cry from being true to myself by suggesting that anyone else should be forced to feel the same way as I do about this subject so notwithstanding I will continue on to say..."

      Getting the point? My opinion. Not yours. Not one I want / expect you to have. Mine. Personally belonging to me...

      Yeah ...
      - RLJ

      in addition to the 5 second reply cap I think slashcode should include a 4th grade reading requirement...

    6. Re:winners or loosers? by crucini · · Score: 2

      You could be missing the big picture. Every mail admin for a large site has to maintain some kind of blocklist to avoid being inundated with spam. Almost everyone complaining about such lists is already benefiting from them and doesn't realize it.

      MAPS is a step past these ad-hoc lists because it has some semblance of due process and some method for removal. MAPS understands that most domains harboring spammers don't realize what they're doing and will change their ways.

      Take away MAPS and the spamming domain or netblock will end up permanently blocked by thousands of large sites. And nobody has time to review these blocklists.

    7. Re:winners or loosers? by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but I have to call bullshit on this one.

      I have a few aquantainces at some of the larger email hosts around. They don't use MAPS or any other RLB-like list out of their control. They use their own home grown lists or they use cust written filtering software specific to their MTAs.

      Additionally, no savvy large company is ever going to put themselves at legal risk by allowing a third party to dictate whose email gets into their domain.

      I get the feeling form your comments that you have seen one or two smaller companies use the RBL (very common, as with smaller ISPs -- clue -- this is why their block % is so low, because they just don't touch that many mailboxes) and drawn the conclusion that the same is happening all over corporate America.

      Cheers,
      - RLJ

  5. They didn't say there's no opt-in by GrenDel+Fuego · · Score: 2, Informative

    They said that they don't have to use a double opt-in. In other words, no confirmation step of the opt-in.

    1. Re:They didn't say there's no opt-in by alecto · · Score: 2

      By calling that a "double opt-in," instead of what it is, opt-in with confirmation (i.e. making sure that the person doing the opting-in is in control of the email address so opted), you are linguistically playing right into the hands of the spam-meisters.

    2. Re:They didn't say there's no opt-in by PacMan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      They said that they don't have to use a double opt-in. In other words, no confirmation step of the opt-in.

      So you think it's OK to allow me to go to their site and "opt-in" with your email address?

      That's what removing the confirmation step allows.

    3. Re:They didn't say there's no opt-in by GrenDel+Fuego · · Score: 2

      No, I actually agree that the double opt-in is much better. But that dosen't change the fact that the slashdot post says that the opt-in isn't required, when in fact it is (just not a double opt-in).

    4. Re:They didn't say there's no opt-in by rew · · Score: 1

      They said that they don't have to use a double opt-in.

      I got an Email a couple of weeks back that I had opted in "in the last 6 months or so" to get their spam. That was sent to an Email address that I haven't used for 5 years.

      The general trick is that with "simple opt-in" the spammer gets to hire a friend who will "opt-in" for a million of HIS friends.

      Roger.

  6. I don't get it! by Kaz+Kylheku · · Score: 5, Interesting

    MAPS only maintains a database that provides information to others, who seek that information.

    That database expresses an opinion: in the opinion of MAPS, the networks listed in the database are suspected of passing through or generating spam.

    Shouldn't this be protected by the First Amendment?

    1. Re:I don't get it! by btempleton · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Whether it's protected by the 1st amendment is an interesting question. Most probably yes, but not certainly. Clearly the court that issued the TRO didn't think so, since prior restraint on protected speech is supposed to be verboten.

      However, this is not actually relevant. They used the threat of the courts to make a settlement agreement, and settlement agreements are not affected by the first amendment.

      In theory, MAPS could have fought it, and probably (though not certainly) have won on 1st amendment grounds, after a few years and at great expense.

      They always said they were willing to test that out but clearly not that willing. They may be more keen to test it on an actual spammer rather than an operator of single opt-in mailing lists.

      How might the 1st amendment not protect them? I haven't read the TRO, which will have some reasons. However, they might rule that blacklisting isn't a protected activity, even though it involves speech. I wouldn't agree, but I could see courts ruling that way.

      --
      Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    2. Re:I don't get it! by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      Not if it's considered slanderous or libelous.

      "Here is a database of people who we think will spam you. We think spam is equivalent to theft."

      I think if you hired a good attorney you could come up with verbiage that would be legally defensible. Maybe something like "These are people who we believe will email you commercial message without your explicit permission."

    3. Re:I don't get it! by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Experian only maintains a database that provides information to others, who seek that information. That database expresses an opinion: in the opinion of Experian, the people listed in the database have good or bad credit.

      Shouldn't that be protected by the first amendment and they should be able to do anything they want with it, whether it's accurate or not?

      Or to put it another way, should I be able to put up a web site that is a "blacklist" of employees who are incompetent? What if someone put you on that list unfairly? That's called defamation.

      Free speech doesn't mean you're allowed to say anything you want, regardless of damage.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    4. Re:I don't get it! by ocie · · Score: 1

      However, like a credit rating, there are objective measures of how spam-prone a site is. Also, I believe you are given a chance to appeal being placed on the ORBS list.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    5. Re:I don't get it! by Velex · · Score: 3, Insightful
      MAPS only maintains a database that provides information to others, who seek that information. That database expresses an opinion: in the opinion of MAPS, the networks listed in the database are suspected of passing through or generating spam. Shouldn't this be protected by the First Amendment?

      The First Amendment is merely a bunch of words on a piece of paper. It can't protect anything. Instead, it is the people that protect their own liberties of free speech. What this decision means is that the people, unless they resist (which they won't), have allowed their government to become more of a corporate republic than a democratic republic.

      Welcome to the Corporate States of America, where the corporate right to censor out trumps the individual right to press. In the year C.E. 1791, the people believed that every person had the right to speak and publish his mind freely, so they drafted and ratified the Bill of Rights as their supreme law of the land. The times have changed however. To become a valuable player in the world of fast-paced business, like those corporate-sponsored business classes promise you will become, you must become submissive to the will of the corporation you subscribe to. The Bill of Rights is antiquated by this new workplace, where it is common for people to think of employment as selling themselves to someone they hate, doing something they don't like, for a cause they don't approve of. In the Corporate States of America, the people don't believe in the right of free expression, so it atrophies and disappears like an unexercised muscle.

      For Libertarians such as me, it is a very distressing thing to see such egalitarian fervor which was displayed at the outset of the United States of America wither into the Orwellian, business-driven culture expressed in that same country today. Unfortunatly, we Libertarians and egalitarian thinkers are a minority, and it seems as though, in the wake of September 11, our goals will be shattered by a powerful majority, whose corporations and sometimes families have been damaged by the unseen enemy. It seems futile to resist; sometimes I only wait until I am assymilated.

      But I know that I won't be. I believe steadfastly in egalitarian Libertarianism, which forbids this kind of bullying by corporations against disinterested parties. Simply because some advertiser can buy law-expert whores shouldn't give them the right to censor an organization that can't buy the same whores to do battle. Apparently it does, because the judge is incompetent. The judge was appointed by a president who was incompetent. The president was elected by a people who are incompetent.

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    6. Re:I don't get it! by benedict · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Corporatism isn't Orwellian -- Orwell's dystopia was a socialist one. It's more like _Brave New World_ than like _1984_. So it's, uh, Huxleian.

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    7. Re:I don't get it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Here is a database of people who we think will spam you. We think spam is equivalent to theft."

      It's not even that though. With orbs you just had to run a misconfigured/insecure mail sever. With maps, at least with some of the lists from them, spam actually had to come through your mail server at one point, so it like "Here are servers that are known to relay/spit out spam".

    8. Re:I don't get it! by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 1

      No, it's more like "Here is a list of ISPs known to pass unsolicited mail. You can use it if you want." Nobody is forcing ISPs to use RBL, though personally, I find it to be incredibly effective at blocking spam. It's also a good tool, I used to work for an ISP who was RBL'ed. It basically just reminded me I forgot to patch an old mailserver sitting on my network. I upgraded it (fixing several security holes in the process) and turned off relaying and the RBL was removed. Wasn't too bad of a process.

    9. Re:I don't get it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Whether it's protected by the 1st amendment is an interesting question. Most probably yes, but not certainly. Clearly the court that issued the TRO didn't think so, since prior restraint on protected speech is supposed to be verboten.
      Note: the First Amendment limits what the government can do. MAPS, as a private entity, is not subject to an argument that they are violating the First Amendment. Experian whinging about MAPS violating their First Amendment Rights is utterly ludicrous.
    10. Re:I don't get it! by btempleton · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If it's clearly an opinion, it is not defamation. If it could be viewed as a statement of fact, it can be defamation, unless of course, it's true. MAPS wordings have been more like factual statements -- these sites, they say, are known to send [some definition of] spam.

      They might have felt at risk for a defamation ruling. Experian's own databases are highly regulated, subject to the Fair Credit Reporting Act, so they won't feel a lot of 1st amendment sympathy. Even with the FCRA, they are often wrong and hurt people getting credit who can't afford to sue.

      I don't know the rules, but I could see trouble if you make a statement you claim is opinion, but everybody is treating it as a factual judgement. In this case, Experian claimed they have sent some 40 billion E-mails and MAPS admitted there were less than a dozen spam complaints. That's a lower ratio than just about any site out there, so this may have played a role, though if so, I don't know why they didn't settle earlier.

      --
      Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    11. Re:I don't get it! by Phroggy · · Score: 2

      However, they might rule that blacklisting isn't a protected activity, even though it involves speech. I wouldn't agree, but I could see courts ruling that way.

      I seem to recall hearing that the courts have ruled that publishing a list of names and addresses of doctors who perform abortions, and crossing their names off when they get murdered, is protected speech.

      However, the MAPS RBL is machine-readable, not human-readable (AFAIK the RBL is not published in any human-readable form; it's only available in the form of replies to specific DNS queries, so you have to know what IP you're querying for).

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    12. Re:I don't get it! by Dwonis · · Score: 2
      AFAIK the RBL is not published in any human-readable form.

      Nope. You can get zone transfers, which can be made quite human-readable. Of course, this costs money (it takes a fair amount to bandwidth to do zone transfers), but it's still offered.

    13. Re:I don't get it! by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      I don't think that's what the poster was claiming. The TRO (temporary restraining order) he mentioned was issued by the court prior to this settlement. Prior restraint (such as that caused by the TRO) has been deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in cases involving protected speech (and there is a fairly high threshold for this - higher than the threshold for the final ruling). Therefore the court that issued the order presumably justified its order by including reasons that this was not prior restrain on protected speech.

    14. Re:I don't get it! by pjrc · · Score: 3, Informative
      MAPS only maintains a database that provides information to others, who seek that information.

      Vixie (who runs MAPS) is the CTO of a backbone internet provider (abovenet) which just happens to be one of those who "seek information". They have a regular history of blocking traffic... of course without explicit permission (and usually without even the knowledge) of downstream ISPs and their unsuspecting customers.

      This is quite a bit different than end users making an informed decision to subscribe to the "service". Likewise, some ISPs subscribe to MAPS on their user's behalf, sometimes without informing them, and other times while leading them to believe the service doesn't impact non-spam messages.

      That database expresses an opinion: in the opinion of MAPS, the networks listed in the database are suspected of passing through or generating spam.

      This is true. ...at least true if "passing through" includes lots of unsuspecting non-spam businesses and users who simply connect to those spamming-suspected networks.

      The lie is in much of the promotion regarding how accurate these opinions are, and the lack of disclosure regarding the non-spam users who are also intentionally blocked. It's quite questionable how well MAPS blocks spam. At the same time, there is no question that MAPS has been responsible for disrupting non-spam communication time and time again.

      For a good taste of the deceptive nature of MAPS, check out their Realtime Blacklist Policy Page. They claim four there are four ways to become blacklisted:

      • Spam Origination
      • Spam Relaying
      • Spam Support Services
      • Netblock Inheritance
      The section about "netblock inheritance" claims that some unsecting users obtains IP address space that was once occupied by a spammer. Note that it doesn't say that they will discontinue listing the non-spammer who is blocked due to "netblock inheritance". But that's only scratching the surface of the deception.

      What that MAPS policy page doesn't clearly explain (or really explain at all) is their regular practice of listing large netblocks, which contain large numbers of non-spammers. It isn't explained that MAPS uses this strong-arm tactic to pressure ISPs that are hosting some spammers by blocking not only the spammer but all of the ISP's unsuspecting non-spam customers.

      MAPS's policy page also doesn't explain that there is no notification to these innocent and unsuspecting bystanders that their communication is being intentionally disrupted simply because some other customer at their ISP is sending spam.

      MAPS's policy page doens't state that they will refuse to stop discrupting messages to non-spammers when it is brought to their attention that a non-spammer has been affected by a netblock that also contains a spammer. (yes, believe it or not, Vixie/MAPS has a long history of refusing to un-block non-spam users when they complain that they are blocked) It certainly doesn't state that it is their intention to block messages to non-spammers and spammers alike, if they happen to be hosted at an ISP that (in MAPS's rather extreem and un-accountable opinions) isn't working hard enough to stop spam.

      Sure, MAPS is entitled to their opinions, and they have the free speech right to share those opinions. Where the line is crossed (IMHO) is:

      • Upstream providers, not end users, subscribing to the service... thereby forcing MAPS's rather extreem opinions on end users without giving them a choice.
      • Misrepresenting their blacklisting policy to imply that they only target spammers and those directly involved in spam... when in truth they intentionally target unsuspecting non-spammers (and never even notify them) simply because they inadvertently chose the same ISP as a spammer did (and the ISP didn't respond by immediately cutting service to an existing customer who MAPS says is a spammer)
    15. Re:I don't get it! by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Sorry, saw that on their site just after posting. I stand corrected. ;-)

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    16. Re:I don't get it! by pjrc · · Score: 3, Informative
      And while I'm on my soapbox... take a look at this this MAPS press release. They write:

      ...the RBL, MAPS' database of IP addresses which have been proven to originate or facilitate the sending of unwanted email...

      Even without the words "have been proven", this is an bold faced LIE. MAPS has a regular practice of blocking large groups of IP numbers (often an entire ISP), with the intention of disruption to the spammer and many non-spammer customers at that same ISP.

      When these non-spammers complain to MAPS that their IP numbers, which certainly don't originate spam and don't facilitate the spammer's activity, have been blocked, the response from MAPS it that these non-spammer need to seek a different ISP.

      To even get close to the truth of how MAPS really operates, perhaps it should read:

      ...the RBL, MAPS' database of IP addresses which may be originating or facilitating unwanted email, or have some loose association with present or prior unwanted email, including unsuspecting users and businesses who happen to be customers at the same ISP as a suspected spammer.

      Of course, there's no requirement to tell the truth in a press release... but this lie is about as blantant as Microsoft's recent press releases claiming IIS is attacked because it's the market leader (when apache is the #1 web server by a considerable margin).

    17. Re:I don't get it! by xsmasher · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      MAPS has a regular practice of blocking large groups of IP numbers (often an entire ISP), with the intention of disruption to the spammer and many non-spammer customers at that same ISP.

      I see no lie. It's true MAPS will sometimes block and entire IP range. This usually happens under a specific set of circumstances, like when one IP address has been blocked, and the ISP moves the spammer to another address to avoid the block.

      In that case it's clear that the ISP is actively supporting spam, so the ISP's whole netblock goes in the black hole. Does this cause collateral damage? You bet it does, and this puts pressure on the black-hat ISP to clean up their act. I don't see a problem with it.

      If the ISP is facilitating SPAM, then its block goes into the list. The IP address doesn't actually blelong to the end user any more than your telephone number does.

    18. Re:I don't get it! by berzerke · · Score: 1

      Even with the FCRA, they are often wrong and hurt people getting credit who can't afford to sue.



      That statement is so very true. I've had problems with Experian (and only Experian, the other 2 credit agencies were not a problem). I talked to a lawyer about sueing them, and while he told me I had a case, under the FCRA, I have to sue in Federal Court. He advised me however, that even if I won, I likely would not get enought damages to pay for court costs. In other words, I would lose either way.

    19. Re:I don't get it! by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      However, they might rule that blacklisting isn't a protected activity, even though it involves speech.

      But MAPS is not blacklisting anybody. Server administrators are, and I doubt anybody could sue over the right to communicate with your server. Just as I do not have to answer my phone, my server does not have to answer your request. Although I wouldn't be surprised if some asinine judge ruled otherwise.

      All MAPS does is provide a list of known spammers. This SHOULD be a protected activity. Unfortunately, the bottom feeding lawyers have blurred everything to the point that none of our rights are certain anymore.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    20. Re:I don't get it! by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2
      Orwell's dystopia used a nominally socialist society as an example. The lessons to be taken from it can be applied to a Capitalist world just as cleanly. Even Adams (the godfather of Capitalism) pointed out that a large enough corporation is almost indistinguisable from a government, where it comes to market distortions.

      The way that I put it is:
      The biggest difference between socialism (really stalinist communism) and mass-merger capitalism is how obvious it is who holds the reins.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    21. Re:I don't get it! by crucini · · Score: 2
      It's quite questionable how well MAPS blocks spam [cnet.com].

      That link is worthless. It's basically an infomercial for a commercial spam filtering service. Reading between the lines, they probably have a rule-based or fuzzy logic approach that judges messages on the fly. MAPS obviously does not do that - they list IP addresses of bad guys. Based on this difference, the article claims that MAPS only blocks "2% of spam". Sounds like they generated their own spam-like messages, and tested different software's efficiency in stopping them. Of course MAPS is not going to filter a message based on spam-like content. Likewise, the article claims that MAPS wrongly rejected non-spam mail as spam. Again, MAPS does not claim that an individual message is spam. Rather, it says that it comes from a spam-friendly IP address.

      As for your complaint about listing large blocks, do you think any other approach is really practical? Spam-friendly netblock owners will move the spammers around to evade the ban. I don't see how MAPS can get into the business of determining "innocence". If someone harbors spam, he is dishonest, and his statements about who uses IP addresses within his range should be seen as ruses, rather than honest reporting.
    22. Re:I don't get it! by benedict · · Score: 2

      That's an excellent point. (And thank you for making the distinction between Stalinism and other forms of socialism/communism, a distinction that's too often obliterated due to anti-left ideology.)

      --
      Ben "You have your mind on computers, it seems."
    23. Re:I don't get it! by rtechie · · Score: 1

      Without getting too involved in the discussion I'd like to point out that, at least in my case as someone who worked for a "downstream" ISP, we were VERY MUCH AWARE that Abovenet was using the MAPS RBL and other features.

      In fact, this was/is something of a "selling point" to ISPs because it meant that they could save bandwidth costs by having the spam blocked upstream before it got anywhere near their pipes.

      Another related issue is that by being under the Abovenet banner they have some "street credit" from other ISPs. For example, Abovenet has cut off entire ISPs without notice for hosting spam and they make a very big deal about it in the contracts. For this reason, other backbone providers/ISP are unlikely to block suspected spam coming from your ISP because you're hosted by Abovenet. I think Brightmail actually let's all email from Abovenet go thoruhg without filtering, for this reason.

      So, in effect, it saves money for the ISPs any way to slice it. Customer complaints from occasionally blocked email are a relatively small issue for them compared to the potential bandwidth savings.

  7. MAPS must have been scared by btempleton · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Making this settlement goes against all their principles, so Experian must have made them afraid for their very existence with this.

    As noted, unless the agreement is very broad, they can certainly name on their web site the companies they have been compelled not to block, and people configuring their own mail filters could decide case by case whether to include them.

    However, if they made an automated list, effectively an alternate blacklist, I could see a court saying they were violating the spirit of the agreement, unless they wrote it carefully to allow them to do this.

    However, oddly enough, it could be to experian's detriment to have it happen manually. If site admins manually put in blocking for their domains, it will be almost impossible for them to get that blocking removed except over a very long period of time, since each admin would have to manually reconfig.

    Of course, they could change the IP address and domain they send mail from to get around that. Somebody (not MAPS) could provide a service that simply lists mail sending IP addresses used by experian, no other comment made.

    --
    Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
    1. Re:MAPS must have been scared by nehril · · Score: 2

      hmn... what could a giant company with more money that God and more lawyers than Satan possibly do to scare anyone?

      Perhaps a nice, friendly reminder was sent that Experian could possibly sic an entire legal firm on *each* of the MAPS team members, attacking them personally with dozens of lawsuits that would bankrupt them immediately. Or perhaps another reminder that credit reports sometimes have errors that could cause your bank account and credit cards to all be cancelled, not to mention your house and car might be repossessed. Such errors are usually caught in fixed in only a couple of years.

      Then there's the small matter of the long cooperation between credit rating companies and various law enforcement agents. How far could that go... hmn.

    2. Re:MAPS must have been scared by L-Train8 · · Score: 2

      MAPS has a press release about this as well, located here. It sounds like there was more going on than mentioned in Experian's press release. MAPS says there were months of negotiations, that both sides made comprimises, and that Experian has made "several changes to ensure that only those who want to receive their email receive it, and to respond to concerns from those who don't."

      While not getting everything it wanted, it seems MAPS did get something out of the deal, and Experian is playing at least a little bit nicer.

      --

      Don't forget that Friday is Hawaiian shirt day.
    3. Re:MAPS must have been scared by crucini · · Score: 2
      Making this settlement goes against all their principles...

      I think your concern might be excessive. On their homepage, MAPS lists three 'truces': Exactis/Experian, Media3 and Harris. The net effect is that in each case the parties came to an agreement. MAPS claims they got some concessions from Experian, though not as much as they hoped for.

      As noted, unless the agreement is very broad, they can certainly name on their web site the companies they have been compelled not to block...

      And the MAPS press release ends with:
      And, of course, we are still free to choose to accept or reject email from them on our own personal networks.

      which seems like a pretty strong hint.

      And I agree with you about local, ad-hoc blocklists. This is the ultimate reality behind all the bickering over MAPS - it is just a proxy for the judgement of individual sysadmins. Ban MAPS, and everyone must spend time maintaining blocklists. And it will be easier to get on than to get off.
  8. Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if we could persuade Mr. Ashcroft to add spamming to the "hacking" category of his anti-civil liberties bill. Then we could stick Experian and those other spamming bastards in jail for life...

    1. Re:Hmmm by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      I wonder if we could persuade Mr. Ashcroft to add post-forging, email-forging, and email blocking to the "hacking" category of his anti-civil liberties bill. Then we could stick MAPS and those other vigilanty bastards in jail for life...

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you spelled vigilante wrong.

    3. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder if we could persuade Mr. Ashcroft to add dumbass slashdot posts to the "hacking" category of his anti-civil liberties bill. Then we could stick Rick the Red and those other troll bastards in jail for life...

    4. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Rick, I know you're still annoyed that your woman left you for the sweet, sweet lovin' of Paul Vixie. And that Vixie stole your car and drove it off a cliff. And that he kicked your dog. And yes, we know about the forged credit card applications and the problems with the sheep porn magazine.

      But dude, really. Don't you think you've posted enough about this? There's schadenfreude and then there's just plain being a fuckwit, man.

    5. Re:Hmmm by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      "Troll bastards" -- so when I'm in jail, you'll be in the next cell? That's cruel and unusual punishment! I'll sue the warden! I refuse to serve my time in the company of Anonymous Cowards! (oh, then I guess I'd better leave /.)

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    6. Re:Hmmm by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      Geeze, AC, don't you think you've posted enough? Maybe I'm a fuckwit, but I'm sticking my karma out there for all to mod down, unlike some who argue against me. I respect your opinion, and it doesn't bother me that you don't respect mine. It doesn't bother me that you call me names and make up lies about me. What bothers me is that you hide to save your 3 or 4 points. Coward indeed.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    7. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Alternate trolling and whoring do not bravery make, my friend.

      ~~~

  9. Spam? by Quasar1999 · · Score: 1

    Did I miss something? Isn't it a federal crime (aka terrorist act) to send unsolicited email? Or was that just a proposal... So hard to tell the facts from rumours these days...

    Either way, I don't see why these spammer lists can't be made public... I wouldn't mind taking the law into my own hands and sentencing these spamming bastards...

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    1. Re:Spam? by netik · · Score: 2, Interesting
      What about this for a solution:
      • Publish the list where everyone can see it (i.e. on MAPS website)
      • If companies object to being on the blacklist, remove them from the RBL but continue to list them on the MAPS website.

      Companies can't complain in this aspect, because it's like consumer reports, and that's protected free speech.
    2. Re:Spam? by dsouth · · Score: 1

      So:

      • It's Legal to provide a hit list of abortion providers and encourage killing them.
      • It's Not Legal to provide a list of spamhaus sites and encourage blocking their email.

      Did I miss something?

    3. Re:Spam? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh my... Free speech is so hard to defend with sites like the one you linked.

      This is the best example of terrorism in the US by US citizens that I have seen to date. This is a bloody hitlist for crying out loud. And we're bickering over unsolicited email???

      I urge every US slashdot reader to voice concern to their elected officials over this!

  10. The people�s internet? by andres32a · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "In addition, neither Experian eMarketing nor its clients will be required to employ the practice of double opt-in (process by which a consumer must reaffirm their permission before they are added to an e-mail list) demanded by MAPS in November 2000." This is just amazing. They shut down napster while they still allow Experian to continue SPAMing. Is this really the internet we all want??? Will this be the kind of legislation we will be seing over the net??

    1. Re:The people�s internet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It really pisses me off that they don't have to confirm people who 'join' their mailing list. I've been told I opt'd in or joined far too many things, that I'd never heard of before receiving their email.

      I think you'd have a difficult time finding anyone who wants what is forming. Lots of ads, pay per view, censorship and government monitoring. Doesn't that sound like a lot of fun?

    2. Re:The people�s internet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's pretty simple and straightforward. On each of the cases, where is the larger stack of money? In Napster, the RIAA has more funds to play with than Napster would earn in years. In this case, Experian pulls in $1.5 billion per year. In the end, we have the best justice system money can buy in the USA.

  11. access.db by jmd! · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, experian.com just made it in to my access.db, along with everyone else who's sued maps in the past. Do they have any mail servers outside that domain, anyone know?

    Here's a list of some other companies not understanding what MAPS is and trying to stop them with bogus lawsuits. I hope they don't accidently wind up in your access.db (or whatever your MTA uses).

    yesmail.com
    harrisinteractive.com
    blackice.com
    media3.com
    247media.com
    experian.com
    exactis.com
    liveprayer.com <--- accused MAPS of being an agent of Satan

    To block these in sendmail, use the 550 5.7.1 error code in your access.db file, like so:

    yesmail.com <tab> 550 5.7.1 Spammer suing MAPS.

    1. Re:access.db by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good god, talk about self-importance. Like ANYONE cares what's in your access.db.

      Not to mention the arrogance of assuming that anyone who sues the Nazis at MAPS is automatically wrong.

    2. Re:access.db by datavortex · · Score: 1
      And if you're blocking by IP address, I reccomend the following range that I have found rather effective: 167.107.0.0/16. May Experian rot in every single blackhole list on the planet for ever and ever, amen.

      --

      He either comes off as a real interesting guy with encyclopedic knowledge,or a pathological liar with an ax to grind
    3. Re:access.db by BadDoggie · · Score: 2
      Just so we're clear on this, that would be, "May Experian ROT-26 in every single blackhole list..."

      Wouldn't want to have to violate one bad law while violating some Amendment by adding them to certain .db files, right?

      woof.

    4. Re:access.db by batray · · Score: 1

      add this to your access file to block them by IP
      # Exactis.com (NETBLK-FGC-REQ000000006714) 2000.11.17 (sued MAPS on 2000.11.15 got TRO on 2000.11.17)
      64.208.134 571 SPAM from Exactis is rejected!
      64.208.135 571 SPAM from Exactis is rejected!

    5. Re:access.db by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > liveprayer.com <--- accused MAPS of being an agent of Satan

      I'll bet that flew high in the courtroom.

      Wonder if Satan countersued?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:access.db by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im posting this AC for obvious reasons. But you are right about liveprayer.com being a serious spam annoyance. I know from people who were directly and personally involved around the BK Media (Owner of liveprayer.com) company who have told me stories about witnessing the spamming going on.

      Being a Christian myself and a hater of spam mail it really bothers me that they would use this kind of medium to spread the word of a faith that totally goes against the idea of doing anything illegal to reach new people.

      In the end all this is going to do is turn alot of people off.

      EOF

    7. Re:access.db by glindsey · · Score: 1
      liveprayer.com >--- accused MAPS of being an agent of Satan
      But of course! After all, it's used by operators who admit their systems are chock-full of daemons!
    8. Re:access.db by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Funny! Liveprayer just started to spam me last night, and they've promised to spam me every night for as long as they live. I hope that won't be long, but...

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  12. MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1, Flamebait
    That's the good news. The fact that the vigilanties at MAPS settled means they realized they would lose in court and perhaps be subject to stiffer penalties, possibly being shut down altogether. Too bad it didn't go that far; another MAPS victim looking out for themselves and not carrying the banner for the rest of the world. ("they settled with us; they rest of you are on your own") That's the bad news: MAPS is still in business.

    Still, it sets another precident: sue MAPS and they'll probably cave. Now, we should all sue and kill them once and for all, one out-of-court settlement at a time.

    Damn vigalanties should be strung up on the closest tree (what's good for the goose and all that).

    --
    If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    1. Re:MAPS settled by gol64738 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      haha! you got flamebaited! serves you right for pretending you know something about MAPS and administration, when you don't know the first thing about it.

      please go to MAPS HOME PAGE and read a little bit so you can at least join the conversation without looking like an idiot.

    2. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 4, Informative
      As a victim of MAPS, I know quite a bit about it. I'm not a spammer, I just noticed one day that my brother wasn't getting any of my email. Turns out his ISP was using MAPS's "service" and my ISP got on MAPS's shit list. When I contacted MAPS about it to find out what happened and how to fix it, the bottom line was this: MAPS lied to me about what they did and how it worked. They left me with one choice: find a new ISP. I refused; my brother found a new ISP, one that would allow him to receive my mail. My ISP does not use MAPS and guess what? I am not flooded with spam. Not one bit. You do not need MAPS to avoid spam.

      P.S. I did not get "flamebaited," I got modded down. Go ahead, mod this down, too. I'm not a karma whore.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    3. Re:MAPS settled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My ISP does not use MAPS and guess what? I am not flooded with spam.

      Post a message on usenet with your real email address. Put your email address on your web site. Include your email address on your Slashdot user info page. Any of the above will get you spam. BUT NOBODY SHOULD HAVE TO PUT UP WITH THIS.

      If your ISP is on the MAPS list, then they have an active spammer as one of their other customers - this is the fault of your ISP choosing to ignore people who violate their terms of service agreement! Complain to your ISP, not MAPS!

    4. Re:MAPS settled by JatTDB · · Score: 2, Troll

      Oh, you vigilantes are so cute when you're mad.

      At any point that I am walking down a public street, a salesman could approach me and launch right into a sales pitch. I can dodge around him, turn, say no, something like that...but it's still going to change my initial plan of walking uninhibited down the street.

      Yes, spam sucks...but look at the examples you gave of how to ensure a spam-filled mailbox...all of those are like walking down the biggest public street in the world.

      But more important than a reason people shouldn't get so incredibly pissed off over spam...the whole concept of black hole lists is just wrong. It's a "kill em all and let god sort em out!" solution. Why should the other users of an ISP with a handful (or even just one) bad user all be punished? They did nothing wrong. In most cases, there's no way they would know such a situation was possible. Use methods that don't punish the innocent, and you'll get a lot more support with stuff like this.

      --
      "That's Tron. He fights for the Users."
    5. Re:MAPS settled by sigwinch · · Score: 1, Troll
      My ISP does not use MAPS and guess what? I am not flooded with spam. Not one bit. You do not need MAPS to avoid spam.
      Disclaimer: this is a flame, boys and girls. Those of you with weak stomachs please avert your eyes.

      Either post your non-spamproofed email address in a message here on Slashdot or shut the fuck up. Having a public email address is an absolute necessity for those of us who actually want to meet new people on the Internet. As opposed to those sacks of shit that only want to have a secret little communications club.

      The 'net email system was designed to let anyone communicate with anyone else. The problem is that spammers abuse that facility to drown out real communications with their pustulent dreck.

      If you actually had more than half a handful of guts in your worthless hide, you'd post your email address here and personally experience being bombarded with crapola by the spammers. If you really have nothing to fear from spam, post your email address. Failure to do so will be considered conclusive proof that you are a repulsive crock of festering goat entrails whose sole accomplishment in their worthless life is shilling for spammers.

      Either walk the walk or get the hell off my Internet.

      P.S. You'll notice I no longer list an email address for this account. The resulting spam was, and still is, overwhelming. Thank $deity for throw-away Hotmail accounts...

      We now conclude your flame. If this had been a polite comment, you would not have felt an overwhelming urge to select -1, Troll.

      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

    6. Re:MAPS settled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yes, spam sucks...but look at the examples you gave of how to ensure a spam-filled mailbox...all of those are like walking down the biggest public street in the world.

      You are so ignorant! Here's an example of why spammers deserve to die a horrible, blackholed death. I maintain an email address that I do not give out to anyone but my closest friends and family, and my co-workers. Suddenly, one weekend I began receiving spam. Baffled, I reviewed the logs on our mail server. Turns out a spamming bastard ran a dictionary attack on our mail server, and eventually happened across my address. When no error was returned, they knew it was valid. Since then, I've received 4-5 spams a day.

      It's pretty disgusting when you take great pains to protect your address at all costs, and these scum-sucking leeches still manage to get spam to you. Apparantly I have to start using an address like 03nf2-034f92nf3324n9f@whatever.com in order to avoid spammers...

      the whole concept of black hole lists is just wrong. It's a "kill em all and let god sort em out!" solution

      No, if I blocked every netblock but those that were known to be legitimate, THEN it would be what you describe. As it is now, they block those that are found to be spamming over certain netblocks. If you don't like it, find an ISP that doesn't use it, or setup your own mail server and deal with the overwhelming load of spam.

      Blackholes like MAPS let ISP's avoid the high costs of spam.

    7. Re:MAPS settled by CharlieG · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Heck, I've always used my real email here, and on the usenet and my web page too. Yes the SPAM is annoying. I wish there was a Windows Client Side software that would tap into the RBL/ORBS etc

      As it is, I deal with the 20 or so pieces of spam I get every day with the delete key

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    8. Re:MAPS settled by djmurdoch · · Score: 2, Informative


      When I contacted MAPS about it to find out what happened and how to fix it, the bottom line was this: MAPS lied to me about what they did and how it worked.


      My experience with them is that they're extremely honest, that they bend over backwards to avoid listing someone, and they'll remove you from their list at the first sign that you've done something to fix the problem. However, they're overworked, and occasionally make mistakes.

      Generally innocent web sites only get blackholed when they're on the same netblock as a bunch of spammers. The idea is that blackholing each of the spammers' addresses is having no effect, so the host must be profiting from the spam: and MAPS blackholes the entire block to try to get the host to act more responsibly. If you happen to be innocent and in the same block, then you're obviously not going to be too happy about it, but you shouldn't have been dealing with sleazebag spam supporters.

      I'd like to hear the details of what went wrong in your case. What did they tell you that was a lie?

    9. Re:MAPS settled by JatTDB · · Score: 2

      Just because you're not taking the "kill em all" to the most extreme possible level does not make it any less wrong when used on a smaller scale. There is no way you can ever justify to me that it is right to punish completely innocent people for another's actions. Act against spammers...don't act against people who did nothing to you.

      As to the choice issue...the reason I tend to speak out on the anti-spam blackhole stuff is not because of the effects on the technologically capable. What about those people who don't know enough to even ask their ISP if they use this sort of thing? The only way they'll ever hear about this sort of thing is when it negatively affects them. Great things that does for the image of the blackholes.

      --
      "That's Tron. He fights for the Users."
    10. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      the bottom line was this: MAPS lied to me about what they did and how it worked

      Would you care to substantiate that fascinating, unsupported and likely actionable statement?

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    11. Re:MAPS settled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      My ISP does not use MAPS and guess what? I am not flooded with spam. Not one bit. You do not need MAPS to avoid spam.

      When an ISP uses the RBL, it's primarily to discourage other providers from allowing spammers, by adding consequences to offset the revenue spammers may generate. It's supposed to stop spam from being sent in the first place, and MAPS will tell you it's not even intended to be very effective at stopping spam that has already been sent.

    12. Re:MAPS settled by asc4 · · Score: 1
      Have a look at JunkSpy. It should do what you're looking for.

      Andrew

    13. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      First you said:
      Either post your non-spamproofed email address in a message here on Slashdot or shut the fuck up.

      Having a public email address is an absolute necessity for those of us who actually want to meet new people on the Internet. As opposed to those sacks of shit that only want to have a secret little communications club.


      Followed by:
      P.S. You'll notice I no longer list an email address for this account. The resulting spam was, and still is, overwhelming.

      OK, so following your own instructions, you will now "shut the fuck up" like the "sack of shit" that you are, right? Because your admitted refusal to post your real email address here puts you in the same boat with me, buddy.

      "Either walk the walk or get the hell off my Internet."

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    14. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      I don't have the details (specific IP addresses) at hand, but they're on file if needed. MAPS claimed they did not filter by domain name, just specific IP addresses. As several pro-MAPS people have explained here in /., this is a lie. They do not filter specific IP addresses, they filter whole blocks. MAPS sent me the IP address they claim was used by a spammer. Guess what? My blocked IP addresses were not even in the same subnet. They were not filtering specific IP addresses, or even whole blocks of addresses; they filtered my ISP's domain name. That's the lie.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    15. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      If your ISP is on the MAPS list, then they have an active spammer as one of their other customers


      Wrong. If my ISP is on the MAPS list, it's because MAPS claims they have an active spammer as one of their customers. MAPS does not offer proof of the spamming, they want proof of a negative -- that there is no spamming. How can an ISP prove that? Apparantly, my ISP could not provide convincing proof to MAPS. My ISP told me that the account in question was no longer active, but I only have their word on that, just as we only have MAPS's word that this account was used to spam once upon a time. Who should I believe? My ISP, who has been quite open and honest with me, or MAPS, who would not even talk to me at first (have you tried actually reaching a human being there?). I know you all believe MAPS, and I understand why. Please understand why I don't believe them.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    16. Re:MAPS settled by wraithgar · · Score: 1

      Oh, you silly spoiled end-users... try being at the other end of postmaster@anydomain.com.
      If I only got 20 spams in a day, I'd start to think we had a broken mail server.

    17. Re:MAPS settled by sigwinch · · Score: 2
      OK, so following your own instructions, you will now "shut the fuck up" like the "sack of shit" that you are, right?
      That's all you have to say? You need to work on your flaming skills. ;-)
      Because your admitted refusal to post your real email address here puts you in the same boat with me, buddy.
      It does not. I acknowledge that there is a spam problem, I take measures not to increase my exposure to that problem, and I support strong countermeasures a la MAPS. You claim that there is no problem and reject countermeasures, yet take action to avoid unwanted mail, and that is hypocrisy.

      I think you fail to appreciate the fact that, were it not for the tireless work of the anti-spammers, the Internet would be saturated with spam. I mean that literally. Even if your "secret" email account didn't get any spam, you'd get no mail at all if projects like MAPS didn't exist. The spammers are relentless and oblivious to the amount of destruction they cause. History has proven that they will use all bandwidth that is made available to them.

      Your email account is only useful because thousands of server administrators do hours of thankless work on your behalf. It's not always pleasant, and there is sometimes collateral damage, but the scorched earth approach is the only thing keeping the Internet usable.

      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

    18. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      I don't have the details (specific IP addresses) at hand, but they're on file if needed.

      Uh huh. Put up or shut up.

      MAPS claimed they did not filter by domain name, just specific IP addresses. As several pro-MAPS people have explained here in /., this is a lie. They do not filter specific IP addresses, they filter whole blocks.

      A block of IP addresses is not the same thing as a domain name. You were not lied to by MAPS, although it's entirely possible that a "pro-MAPS" person said something misleading in a comment here. (Plenty of "pro-MAPS" people are as ignorant of how the RBL works as you yourself appear to be; apparently reading the damn documentation is difficult or something. I guess it's a slashdot thing.)

      And this bears repeating: MAPS never "filtered" anything. MAPS published a list of IP addresses, which ISPs could, at their discretion, choose to use as a basis for filtering. Some of them bounced mail based on that list, some of them tagged the mail as "possible spam" based on it, some just kept logs based on it, and probably some people used it as a list of mail to allow.

      MAPS sent me the IP address they claim was used by a spammer. Guess what? My blocked IP addresses were not even in the same subnet.

      Was your IP address in a subnet that was owned by the same entity? Did you look up the listed IP address in their lookup form and read the justification for its listing?

      MAPS has always been very clear that they will eventually list all known addresses for a given company if that company persisted in antisocial behavior. This is not, however, "listing a domain name." Domain names are not the same as areas of ownership.

      They were not filtering specific IP addresses, or even whole blocks of addresses; they filtered my ISP's domain name.

      Did you even try to understand how the RBL's publication mechanism works? The whole system is based on the idea of a mail server (or, in rare cases, a router) querying the RBL servers for the status of a single IP address. It is not possible to list a domain name, because there is no way to ask the rbl.mail-abuse.org server if "example.com" is listed.

      But don't take my word for it. Read the damn manuals yourself.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    19. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      You claim that there is no problem and reject countermeasures, yet take action to avoid unwanted mail, and that is hypocrisy.

      Wrong. I do not claim there is no problem. I do not reject countermeasures. I reject ineffective vigilante countermeasures. I claim that MAPS does not help, at least not as much as they would have us believe. I'm not alone in this claim. I claim that my ISP does not use MAPS and I have no spam problem. That's not because there is no spam problem, it's because I take action to avoid unwanted email. Why is that so awful? Why am I villified for being careful about how I share my email address?

      the scorched earth approach is the only thing keeping the Internet usable.

      I disagree. That's the bottom line. That's where we disagree. It doesn't make me an ogre. It doesn't make you an ogre. However, if you block my email based solely on my IP address and nothing else, simply because some self-appointed other person decided to list my IP address as evil, then in my opinion you are indeed an ogre.

      What everyone on your side of the arguement fails to realize is that IP address alone is not sufficient evidence of spam. Period. I support a legal definition of spam that we can all agree really targets spam; I will never agree to IP address alone as the sole identifier. I offer to work to define spam -- do you? No. You already know spam when you see it: anything on the MAPS list is spam. Period. No question. No appeal. Sorry, but that doesn't cut it for me. Who died and left the Internet in the care of MAPS?

      Once we have that definition we can enact laws to protect us from spam and punish those to send it. Until then, the vigilanties like MAPS are simply lawless tyrant bullies trying to tell everyone else how to live. You obviously like that, but I don't. Especially when they tell me I can't send email to my brother but won't tell me why.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    20. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      You raise some good points, but let's start with your really bad one:

      I don't have the details (specific IP addresses) at hand, but they're on file if needed.

      Uh huh. Put up or shut up.

      Sorry, but they are not here, I do not have them at hand. And even if I did, I would not post my IP address -- I'm not stupid. If I ever need to, I will produce the evidence. Need to in the sense of providing evidence to a court to support a denial-of-service lawsuit against MAPS.

      And this bears repeating: MAPS never "filtered" anything. MAPS published a list of IP addresses

      Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know that, OK? I knew that years ago. But my brother's ISP -- the ones actually using the RBL to block my email -- denied any responsibility and referred me to MAPS. If it wasn't for MAPS and the way they and they alone decide who is and is not labled a spammer -- and their lack of any appeal process or any form of mediation outside the courts -- I would not have had problems sending email to my brother.

      MAPS has always been very clear that they will eventually list all known addresses for a given company if that company persisted in antisocial behavior.

      Two points. Three, really. 1) Yes, I know they don't actually filter by domain name. What they do is find out all the addresses under a domain name and filter them. Same difference. So they don't go through DNS, so what? The effect is the same. 2) MAPS has not "always" been clear about this. They did not make any such claim to me, personally. To me, personally, over the telephone, they claimed only to block individual IP addresses. They denied blocking entire sets of IP addresses, but that is exactly what they did then and do now. They lied to me. 3) MAPS is the sole arbiter of "antisocial behavior"? I don't think so. Not in a free society. That's my primary complaint against MAPS. If they had listed my IP address because someone else in the same subnet was spamming, I would understand that. But even if that's what happened -- even if what they said were true, which it is not -- they did not have any mechanism for me to prove that I was not a spammer and get my IP address taken off the RBL. Their only solution was for me to change ISPs. That's extortion. What's worse, the entity they claimed was spamming was from another state, in another subnet, but they blocked (excuse me, listed) me because I had the same ISP. That's mistaken identity, and that's forgivable too, if they have a process for removing non-spammers from their list. But they have no such process, and have no interest in considering one. That's what makes them vigilanties, and thus vermin to be exterminated.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    21. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but they are not here, I do not have them at hand. And even if I did, I would not post my IP address -- I'm not stupid.

      Er, that would be "my ISP's mail server's address", not "my IP address", unless there's something you're not telling us?

      Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know that, OK?

      If you know it, please stop making statements which claim the diametric opposite. Around these parts, we call saying something while knowing it not to be true "lying."

      But my brother's ISP -- the ones actually using the RBL to block my email -- denied any responsibility and referred me to MAPS.

      Exactly how is it MAPS' problem if your brother's ISP has lazy, incompetant tech support people?

      If it wasn't for MAPS and the way they and they alone decide who is and is not labled a spammer

      MAPS does not decide "who is a spammer." MAPS decides who will be added to the RBL. Your brother's ISP was entirely free to not use the RBL if they disagreed with MAPS' criteria and methods. Your brother, in turn, was quite free to seek out a competing ISP if he disagreed with that trust.

      Furthermore, the contention that "they and they alone" make the determination that someone is a spammer is ridiculous: there are upwards of fifteen similar services to MAPS, most of which offer substantially different lists.

      and their lack of any appeal process or any form of mediation outside the courts

      MAPS has a lengthy appeals process, and one which I have personlly observed them going above and beyond the letter of when working with people.

      The problem is, having an appeals process does not mean "we'll take you out if you gripe loudly enough," which is what most people complaining about the process were actually looking for.

      Yes, I know they don't actually filter by domain name.

      So stop saying that they do. Domain names are domain names. They aren't IP addresses and they aren't netblocks, and they are not strong indications of corporate boundaries. If your ISP had changed its domain name once a day for a month, its netblocks would still have been in the RBL.

      This may seem like a trivial distinction to you, but you are substantially misrepresenting the technical facts about the RBL when you repeat this assertion.

      To me, personally, over the telephone, they claimed only to block individual IP addresses.

      If, in fact, that was said to you, I can only assume that someone at MAPS fucked up. If I worked for them, I'd apologize on their behalf. Since you're refusing to state key facts of this case, it's really hard to know whether to even accept this statement at face value.

      MAPS is the sole arbiter of "antisocial behavior"?

      As above. MAPS isn't the sole arbiter of anything other than "who gets listed in the RBL". Your brother's ISP was free to not use that list, use that list in a different fashion (tagging instead of blocking), whitelist your brother's account from that list, use a different service's list, or use no list at all.

      they did not have any mechanism for me to prove that I was not a spammer and get my IP address taken off the RBL.

      Well again, there's a problem here: it's not your IP address. It belongs to your ISP, and it is their responsibility, not yours, to take the proper steps to be delisted if they decide they want to. If they didn't think that was necessary, and it was getting in the way of your communications, pehaps you should have voted with your feet and dollars. Frankly, you were getting ripped off, and the people ripping you off appear to have successfully deflected your anger onto a 3rd party.

      Their only solution was for me to change ISPs. That's extortion.

      You keep flinging around terms with reckless disregard for their meaning. Extortion implies that MAPS intended to reap some tangible benefit from you, backed up by a threat of violence. The truth is that MAPS had a dispute with your ISP, your ISP choose to ignore it, and you got caught in the fallout. That's not extortion, that's life. It's also unfortunate, but the whole point of a list like the RBL is to make it hard for companies to ignore the spam issue.

      What's worse, the entity they claimed was spamming was from another state, in another subnet, but they blocked (excuse me, listed) me because I had the same ISP.

      Since you refuse to mention your ISP by name, it's basically impossible for anybody to attach any validity to this claim. But regardless: they did not list you. They listed your ISP. There was no appeals process for you because you don't own the netblocks and you don't set policy at your ISP. Sucks for you, I admit, but that's the nature of the beast. Stop whining and consider giving your money to a responsible company instead.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    22. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      At any point that I am walking down a public street, a salesman could approach me and launch right into a sales pitch.

      As a rule, people do not pay monthly or hourly fees to walk down the streets. Strangly, people value their time and resources a bit more when they have to pay for it.

      And by the way, aggressive public salesmanship (stepping into your path, yelling loudly at you) can be and often is criminally prosecuted under various public nuisance abatement and personal harassment laws.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    23. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      You keep flinging around terms with reckless disregard for their meaning. Extortion implies that MAPS intended to reap some tangible benefit from you, backed up by a threat of violence.

      Sorry if I misled you. Please suggest an alternate word. What I meant was this: MAPS expected me to change ISPs to suit them. The tangible benefit to them is increased legitimacy and an increased sense of power ("we cost someone another subscriber!"). The threat to me was not physical, it was a threat to continue to have my mail blocked. That's extortion to me: Using a threat to change someone else's behavior. What word would you use?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    24. Re:MAPS settled by crucini · · Score: 2
      You appear to be confused.
      MAPS claimed they did not filter by domain name...

      The MAPS RBL is a system which accepts an IP address and returns a result if the IP is associated with spam. It does not work with domain names at all.
      As several pro-MAPS people have explained here in /., this is a lie. They do not filter specific IP addresses, they filter whole blocks.

      Netblock != domain. The fact that MAPS blacklists spamming netblocks does not imply that they target domains. Domains exist within the context of name resolution. They have nothing to do with network architecture. It's possible to host a thousand domains at one IP address, or have one domain that includes thousands of IP addresses.
      My blocked IP addresses were not even in the same subnet. They were not filtering specific IP addresses, or even whole blocks of addresses; they filtered my ISP's domain name.

      The first sentence does not support the second. They probably listed some or all of the netblocks which your ISP controls. The subnet of which you speak was probably contained within one of those netblocks. Your conclusion that they "filtered" your ISP's domain name does not make sense.
      That's the lie.

      Before slinging insults, you might consider learning a bit more about the internet. It does not work the way you think it does.
    25. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      What I meant was this: MAPS expected me to change ISPs to suit them

      No. MAPS wanted your ISP to change whatever behavior it was that got them listed in the first place.

      The tangible benefit to them is increased legitimacy and an increased sense of power ("we cost someone another subscriber!").

      Please look up the definition of the word "tangible." You have just provided a perfect example of an intangible benefit.

      And even then, you're wrong. Read their damn website. The benefit to them is, hopefully, that an ISP changes the behavior that led to the listing. (And boy oh boy would it be nice if you would just name your ISP so that we both could stop being deliberately vague about what the hell happened here. Your continued evasions really make it hard to think that you're presenting your case in good faith, and make me wonder if maybe your ISP isn't owned by Dean Anderson or Mitch Halmu.)

      That's extortion to me: Using a threat to change someone else's behavior. What word would you use?

      It's called a boycott. It has a long and honorable history, and it is not extortion. Look it up.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    26. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      That's extortion to me: Using a threat to change someone else's behavior. What word would you use?

      It's called a boycott. It has a long and honorable history, and it is not extortion. Look it up.

      Main Entry: extort
      Pronunciation: ik-'stort
      Function: transitive verb
      Etymology: Latin extortus, past participle of extorquEre to wrench out, extort, from ex- + torquEre to twist -- more at TORTURE
      Date: 1529
      : to obtain from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or illegal power


      Main Entry: boycott
      Pronunciation: 'boi-"kät
      Function: transitive verb
      Etymology: Charles C. Boycott died 1897 English land agent in Ireland who was ostracized for refusing to reduce rents
      Date: 1880
      : to engage in a concerted refusal to have dealings with (as a person, store, or organization) usually to express disapproval or to force acceptance of certain conditions

      Sounds to me like extort is the right word. The only boycott involved is my boycott of MAPS; they certainly did not boycott me, they extorted me.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    27. Re:MAPS settled by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      to obtain from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or illegal power

      No force was used, unless you define "publishing a list of IP addresses" to be "force." No intimidation was used. Certainly no illegal power was employed. I guess you can argue "undue", but I simply don't buy it.

      The only boycott involved is my boycott of MAPS; they certainly did not boycott me, they extorted me.

      MAPS publishes a list of IP addresses to boycott email traffic from. Their subscribers implement that boycott.

      MAPS neither boycotted you nor extorted you. MAPS did not ask anything of you personally: As I have been stating repeatedly here, and as you have been assiduously avoiding acknowledging, you are simply not at issue here. The dispute is between MAPS and your ISP. "You" are always free to choose to give your time and money to a more responsible business, or convince your brother to give his time and money to an equally irresponsible one if that is your preference.

      To sum up: you make heated claims about MAPS, but you deliberately and repeatedly mis-state the technical and legal facts. You claim persecution, but refuse to provide key evidence to support your claim. You persist in confusing an action directed at your ISP with an action directed at you personally. In short, you're a troll and a FUD-spreader, despite your better grasp of english grammar than the breed generally has. And in this all, you're sadly typical of most of the anti-MAPS firebreathers.

      Enough posting to 3-day-old articles now.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    28. Re:MAPS settled by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      Enough posting to 3-day-old articles now


      I see your point. One last comment. I see your point. I really do. You fail to see mine. Since you refuse to acknowlege that I have a right to a point of view different from yours, I quit as well. I just hope that one day you are burned by MAPS and begin to see how it looks to be on the receiving end of their actions. You claim I was not intimidated. I disagree, and since I'm the one who was affected -- not you -- I fail to see how you can claim I was not intimidated. MAPS caused a real problem for me, and they refused to help me solve it. Their only "solution" was to switch ISPs.

      As for my refusal to name names, I fail to see the point. If you must know, I am no longer with that particular ISP because they went out of business. So what? What you fail to recognize is that I am -- we all are -- under the constant threat that MAPS will blacklist our current ISP, with no recourse except to find another. Which means that MAPS becomes the sole arbiter of who you may or may not do business with. I personally resent that. What's worse, they have set themselves up as the sole judge of which ISP is "worthy" of the Internet, but they are not in the business of "blessing" the good ones, only condemning the ones they don't like. In other words, MAPS will not tell me I'm safe if I choose ISP X. I could waste a lot of money on ISPs as MAPS condemns them one by one. I personally dislike the big guys and wish to support local, little guys, but with MAPS out there the only safe ISPs are the ones too big for MAPS to threaten, basically just MSN and AOL. Woo, great choice there! Is this the world you wish to live in, one where everyone is either with MSN or AOL because some punk in California realized that he could throw his weight around on the Internet simply because bits are harder to regulate than atoms?

      If I disagree with Consumer Reports I can ignore them. If they claim the Beltchfire 3000 is a death trap I am free to ignore them and buy one anyway. I am not free to ignore MAPS. If MAPS decided the Beltchfire 3000 is a death trap MAPS would prevent me from using one by remote control, and there's nothing I can do about that. But MAPS won't tell me what they consider safe, just that I should buy something else. And they won't tell me not to buy the Belchfire 3000 until after I own one and find it no longer works. That's denial of service, and as far as I'm concerned that should be illegal. You can disagree, and I understand why you do. I just wish you were open minded enough to understand my motives here. But then, experience has taught me that vigilanties have a pretty closed minded approach to just about everything.

      I'd say "see you later" but I honestly hope we never meet again.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  13. perhaps we could just.... by ohzero · · Score: 1

    sick se7en(http://www.attrition.org/errata/www/sev.001. html) on Experian. I'm sure it's yet another cause he might add to his list of pathetic attempts at publicity. mooo.

    --
    -- http://www.criticalassets.com
  14. Experian needs to be fought, not just for e-mail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    When I read this story, I was floored by the pandering to the behemoth that is Experian. For those who don't know, they're the company that takes about one minute to damage your credit for the next seven years due to a complaint, but several months or years to get the complaint reversed when it was mistakenly done. Obviously they are business and not consumer oriented. I didn't know they were in the e-mail business, but I wouldn't be surprised if they're not correlating their credit info databases versus e-mail to provide us such wonderful services as 27% APR credit cards and the like.

    How to deal with this? I will be calling them at 1 888 EXPERIAN (1 888 397 3742). I also found a response form at http://www.experian.com/cgi-bin/mail_page/form?cat egory=o. Voice your displeasure over this travesty of justice and continued trampling of consumer rights!

  15. what about changing negative to positive? by Alejo · · Score: 0
    They can sue them because they "ban" people. What if there is the REVERSE, and instead of giving a Black Hole list, they give a Star list. This list having domains wich are NOT spammers.

    Of course this would take a LOT more effort on hardware, but given todays cheapo steroid-pcs (ie athlon 1.4 at $350) it is possible.

    Being there something of 100 million domains registered (please correct this), and using a hash of it ti store a valid domain, it would take 400MB, adding some cpu nice sorting stuff say it takes 1GB.

    Main prob would be validation, but with a report based similarly to whatever MAPS uses now, it is most likely already done.

    Even though IANAL, I guess they don't have so much background to sue MAPS with this schema.

    Comments?

    1. Re:what about changing negative to positive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting, but (IANAL) all the other guys have to do is add "By implication," to their argument.

    2. Re:what about changing negative to positive? by sigwinch · · Score: 2
      What if there is the REVERSE, and instead of giving a Black Hole list, they give a Star list. ... Being there something of 100 million domains registered (please correct this), and using a hash of it ti store a valid domain, it would take 400MB, adding some cpu nice sorting stuff say it takes 1GB.
      Spam filtering is usually done by IP address. Using one bit per IP address would take only 512MB of storage. (For IPv4 at least. IPv6 would be harder.)

      If the whitelist became popular enough, you could get people to pay for having their IPs listed. Say $1.00 for each IP address, perhaps with discounts for quantity. The fee would be dirt cheap compared to the cost of operating an email server, so I don't think anyone could complain. And since it's a real transaction, you can have an extremely strong contract that they can't sue you about. Literally can't sue: you could make their sole recourse be arbitration with an arbitrator and in a jurisdiction of your choice.

      --

      --
      Kuro5hin.org: where the good times never end. ;-)

  16. History on this case by hillct · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the spirit of Karma Whoring :-)

    Here's some history on this case. It features articles from various stages in the case. Has anyone found the text of the complaint or injunction? still looking...

    --CTH

    --

    --Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
  17. For those who are confused: by Nindalf · · Score: 4, Funny

    Experian is a company that sells crack by spamming millions of schoolchildren. MAPS (the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies) has refused to provide their drug-friendly mailing lists because they insist that crack is not a psychedelic drug. However, Experian threatened to take them to court with the argument that if they can include marijuana under their umbrella, then the definition is broad enough to include crack.

    Wisely recognizing that both sides are better off not attracting the attention of the courts, MAPS has apparently backed down.

    A loss indeed. You can expect many of your peaceful local potheads to become violent criminal crackheads any day now.

    I hope this clears up any misconceptions you may have had from the shamefully vague top-level story. I'm a little fuzzy on some of the details myself, but as usual, trying a few likely domain names gave me access to the essentials.

  18. do i understand this correctly? by gol64738 · · Score: 1

    MAPS provides a list of known spammers. so what? simply listing a company doesn't affect that company at all.

    it's only when mail server admins incorporate the MAPS list as a spam list does action actually take place. shouldn't a company have to sue that particular admin?

    it's the admin that actually did the damage, not a simple list somewhere...
    i can put up a list of corporation names on my website on my own webserver and make it publically accessible. if one of the companies tells me to delist them, i can't say no??

    1. Re:do i understand this correctly? by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      So your arguement is that MAPS is just an accessory to the crime, since they don't do the actual blocking? Isn't inciting a crime still a crime?

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    2. Re:do i understand this correctly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      MAPS provides a list of known spammers.

      No, MAPS provides a list of alleged spammers. Alleged, convicted, and executed by MAPS, with no trial, no appeals process, no nothing. "Recognize that we are Net Gods or we block your email." Extortion, even if they aren't asking for money. Hell, they are asking for money -- they're asking for someone to take the time to "prove" a negative, which can take quite a long time, indeed (forever is about the longest time there is).

      As a victim of MAPS (no, I'm not a spammer, I just was unfortunate enough to use an ISP that got on their shit list) I know what I'm talking about. MAPS lied to me, and I have the proof: They claimed to only block IP addresses, not entire domains, but my emails that were blocked were from a different subnet than the mailings they claimed were "proof" of spam from my ISP; hence they were not blocking just select addresses but my ISP's entire domain. Liars, plain and simple. Most terrorists are.


      Just because MAPS claimed someone once used my ISP to send spam, my email was effectively shut down. Why should every internet user in the world obtain permission from MAPS to send email? Who the hell granted them this authority over the Internet? Nobody, that's who. If they can take unilateral action then so can anyone else. I deplore crackers shutting down legitmate sites, but if someone were to kill this nest of vipers I would consider the world better off. Far better off.

    3. Re:do i understand this correctly? by SnatMandu · · Score: 2

      It's no crime. Maybe MAPS's strategy is bad, as if my ISP allows spammers to operate, those with MAPS-using ISPs won't get my mail.

      If I make a list of spammers (according to my own definition) and post it on the web, and you decide to hunt them down and kill them, does that make me an accessory to murder? I hope not.

      I should still be OK if I post the list and say "somebody oughta kill these f&ckers". Jim Bell's case might have proved me wrong on this one, I forget the details

    4. Re:do i understand this correctly? by SnatMandu · · Score: 3
      Who the hell granted them this authority over the Internet? Nobody, that's who.

      All the ISPs that subscribe gave them authority, that's who. That's not nobody.

  19. Distributed MAPS by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    We need a decentralized, "P2P" MAPS so that there isn't anyone to sue.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:Distributed MAPS by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      How about decentralized P2P email, so I can email my brother directly without MAPS blocking me because they claim another of my ISP's customers sent some spam once upon a time.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
  20. well... where do we go from here? by digitalmuse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "We are very pleased with the settlement agreement and believe it reflects the validation of Experian's e-mail marketing standards and that we remain at the forefront of consumer privacy and protection,'' said Tom Detmer president and general manager of Experian eMarketing Services. ``This settlement confirms that the privacy practices we have in place are responsible, accountable and in the best interests of the public and the marketplace. We will continue to offer the double opt-in solution for those clients who determine it is the right permissioning practice for their business."
    well, since we will only be seeing more cases like this in the future as these spam-whores use the courts as a shield to protect themselves from MAPS and other public-service mail filtering tools, what are we going to do from here?
    I for one would be quite interested in finding a listing of companies that have fought these charges in court and through miss-representing their datum and hiring bigger and better lawyer-weasels, have made themselves immune from public ban lists. Does anyone know of any existing services like this? I for one would be glad just to have a plain html listing of folks like Experian who have won in the courts to keep them selves off of RBLs and the like. I'd be even more keen on a nice XML page that I can parse with a quick script and have update my mail-server's ban lists. anyone want to make me a very happy admin? c'mon, please?

    --
    "If I wanted your input on my pet project, I'd stick my hand up your ass and use you like a sock-puppet." - Muse
    1. Re:well... where do we go from here? by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Add a neural net program the the mail programs that can learn to recognize what you consider spam?

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  21. Other filter lists... by gavcam · · Score: 5, Informative
    If a spammer gets taken out of one filter list then you can always rely on it still being in the other lists.

    I use

    • relays.ordb.org
    • or.orbl.org
    • inputs.orbz.org
    • outputs.orbz.org
    • spews.relays.osirusoft.com
    to keep my inbox clean.

    Winning one battle doesn't win the war!

    1. Re:Other filter lists... by j-beda · · Score: 1
      However the ORB sites only list Open Relays, which this is not one of.

      It doesn't really sound TOO bad, presuming that they are actually using at least single opt-in lists. Yes, the single opt-in is open to abuse by third parties, but as long as the list maintainers are not abusing their own opt-in policies it is certainly much less of a problem than the traditional web/usenet address harvesters out there.

    2. Re:Other filter lists... by owlorc · · Score: 1, Informative

      hmmm ... missed a couple ...

      The osirusoft.com and orbz.org lists by themselves are awfully good ad excising unwanted UCE content.

      rbl.maps.vix.com
      orbs.dorkslayers.com
      or.orbl.org
      inputs.orbz.org
      outputs.orbz.org
      relays.ordb.org
      relays.osirusoft.com
      bl.spamcop.net
      spews.relays.osirusoft.com
      ipwhois.rfc-ignorant.org

      The rblcheck package, now at sourceforge is a bit out of date, and you'll want to patch new DNS based filters into the source.

    3. Re:Other filter lists... by VB · · Score: 2, Informative


      (The parent has not been modded high enough yet as of this post)

      Regardless of the legal dispute, MAPS should have their implementation for filtering spammers removed from all MTAs. This is a frustrating problem, and is a major time-eater for diligent admins and an even bigger one for end-users on networks not overseen by such admins. Sendmail has removed MAPS support, reaffirming my commitment to stick with it since Sendmail's security record as been much improved over the past 3 years and it is great free software. A bitch to configure, but hey; when you run Slackware you know what you're getting into. I found it very alarming and frustrating when I decided to put a stop to what appears to be a significant increase in spam lately by finally getting around to implementing MAPS, only to discover the new fee-based implementation of MAPS. This pricing/policy change is completely antithetical to what anti-spam software should stand for! They started out as this "crusader" organization making software to rid the 'Net of the filth that proliferates as spam, then stick you with a fee? Quite unsamaritan and anti-community for a service that purports to assist the community, only to later suck you into payments once they've garnered enough of a following. Exploitative in the vilest sense.

      ORDB is a godsend! I put this on my servers 2 days ago and spam has all but ceased. 10 trickled through the first day and were added to the list. ORDB's policy is effective, efficient and fair and it doesn't bog down the server or the network in any noticeable way. It's a quick 30 minute configure for a moderate sendmail admin, and yields immediate results. Granted it doesn't provide known spammer protections, but how can you do that?

      The onus on stopping spammers is on ISPs through their AUPs. Once they make it crystal clear that using their network services for stupid things like Spam, port scanning, and defacing web-pages is going to immediately ban them from that service, the Spam and other useless 'Net activities will stop and these idiots will quietly go back to the middle-high school where they once worked and pick up their green weenies, Mr. Clean, and get those toilets clean and those hallway tiles shiny again, where their skills/socialization are most appropriate.

      Clearly, we can't count on our Congress to improve the Spam sitation...

      --
      www.dedserius.com
      VB != VisualBasic
  22. Finally a non-SPAM icon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    finally!

    1. Re:Finally a non-SPAM icon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HEY!! what happened to the can of spam!? Why was it removed?? This new icon SUX!!

  23. Another enemy of MAPS by Hanzie · · Score: 2

    Reverend Keller of liveprayer.com is another enemy of our friends at MAPS. Apparently, you could sign anybody up to be on their e-mail list.

    Donation address of liveprayer.com:

    6660 46th AVE North
    St.Petersburg, Florida 33709

    For fun, read the letter he posted to brag about suckering a young girl out of her babysitting money, and getting her to work her family and friends for him. THIS is social engineering.

    --
    ********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
    1. Re:Another enemy of MAPS by FFFish · · Score: 1

      Good god (pun intended), what a brilliant site! It's almost enough to make me wish to give up all my morals, and start my own "sucker the gullible" Internet church. Why the heck shouldn't *I* get the credulous to throw three million buckaroonies at me? Hell, I can write more persuasively and convincingly than the turd that's running this so-called "church," and I might even be tempted to put that money to good charitable use!

      As always,
      amazed by people...

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    2. Re:Another enemy of MAPS by Hanzie · · Score: 2

      Take careful note of their street address.

      I wonder if keller "has 2 horns and spake as a dragon?"

      --
      ********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
    3. Re:Another enemy of MAPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hm. i was going to say something insightful but i forgot what it was. kids, don't smoke the dope.

    4. Re:Another enemy of MAPS by gd23ka · · Score: 1

      Dammit! I could be rich if I weren't so goddamm lazy!

  24. maybe a blacklist would work on a web page by mj6798 · · Score: 4, Informative
    Currently, to many lawyers and judges, MAPS probably looks like an obscure, deeply technical means by which some group of people is "preventing" another group of people from getting mail.

    But these people understand the concept of a "web page". If, instead, something like MAPS were based on a list of domain names found on web pages, I think people would have a much harder time "shutting it down". After all, it would be human readable speech, and if people mine that data for their E-mail programs, well, so be it.

  25. MAPS no better than the spammers by terrymr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    MAPS' tactics appear no better than those sending the spam - All kinds of innocent sites have fallen off the internet for daring to be on the same IP block as somebody who sent spam.

    Requiring a double opt in for mailing lists isn't exactly spam related now is it ? the subscription policy for an email list should be a matter for it's owner not for some third party to decide.

    1. Re:MAPS no better than the spammers by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      Requiring a double opt in for mailing lists isn't exactly spam related now is it ?

      Actually , it is. It's really easy to sign some rube up to a dozen non-confirmed lists - Instant SPAM!

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    2. Re:MAPS no better than the spammers by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Well yes it is - but there you are shifting the blame from the abuser (the one who signed up the poor unsupecting soul) to the innocent third party who didn't know this had happened.

      While I accept that double opt in measures should be encouraged to prevent this it is hardly rational to lump mailing list operators who don't confirm their subscriptions with spammers - accidental subsription to a mailing list is not spam.

      I don't see why running a mailing list should qualify you for any of MAPS's lists let alone the RBL.

      The probable reasoning behind settling the suit is that maps where stating by listing these sites in the RBL that they were confirmed spammers (UNTRUE) - the supreme court has already ruled that the 1st ammendment does not cover commercial speech intended to destroy anothers business. so no protection = slander, defamation etc.

    3. Re:MAPS no better than the spammers by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Requiring a double opt in for mailing lists isn't exactly spam related now is it ?

      Wow. That's about the most ignorant thing I've heard on /.! So, you don't mind me going off to subscribe your address to 2352 porn mailing lists, then?

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    4. Re:MAPS no better than the spammers by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Fine - presumably you would then expect me to blame those mailing lists for your juvenile behaviour.

      Why stop at double opt in ? maybe somebody else was using my computer that day - I know lets require all email addresses to be verified by telephone, USPS and Fedex before we add somebody to a list.

  26. Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by mtgstuber · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't get me wrong, I'm no fan of SPAM, but given that MAPS and services like it, automatically blackhole email from dynamically served DNS entries, I am quite happy to see them sued, sued into oblivion even. MAPS decreases freedom on the net. I have a DSL connection through a local carrier who shall remain nameless. I run a web server on my connection, largely for family and friends. If I get a business connection where I can get a properly registered DNS entry, I have to pay twice as much for half the bandwidth. So I use dynamic DNS services. Thanks to MAPS its about impossible for me to send email directly from my server. Instead I am forced to use the email account of my service provider. (Ironically, I can send email from SPAM ridden web mail services any time I want.) I resent MAPS's heavy handed self righteous policing of the net, even more than I resent the bandwidth wasting spammers. I would rather delete some extra #$%^ and have freedom, than have somebody tell me what I can and can't do.

    1. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by strredwolf · · Score: 2

      MAPS is deliberately slow on the nominations, and rightfully so. However, some others are quick on the draw because of a clear and present danger.

      Besides, It's costing all of us to handle the spam. Dynamic DNS? Read: Dialup, someone's blocking on the DUL (and rightfully so). Smarthost instead.

      --

      --
      # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
      $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
    2. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by wayne · · Score: 2, Insightful
      MAPS decreases freedom on the net. [ ...] Thanks to MAPS its about impossible for me to send email directly from my server. Instead I am forced to use the email account of my service provider.
      No, MAPS is not decreasing freedom on the net. Your right to throw a punch ends where my nose begins. You still have the ablility to attempt an SMTP connection to anywhere you want, and people who run SMTP servers, such as myself, still have the right to ignore you. You have no "right" to force people to accept your email, I have every right to use my property as I see fit. MAPS has every right to say what they want, as long as it is not libelous or desturbing the piece or breaking some other serious law. You and I are free to choose to listen to them or not.

      Really, you aren't even seriously hampered by MAPS . You can still send email, all you have to do is use a machine with a fixed IP address and hasn't been involved in a lot of SPAM.

      What you are doing is missplacing your anger. You should be mad at your ISP for its silly restrictions and costs of providing you with a fixed IP address. You should not be mad at MAPS, nor the people who choose to use MAPS.

      --
      SPF support for most open source mail servers can be found at libspf2.
    3. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by mtgstuber · · Score: 1

      I would hardly say my anger is misplaced. I have never used my system for SPAM, nor will I. I have been using the same IP address for almost two years. My address has not been used for SPAM. I tried to send an email to a friend serviced by another ISP, and was summarily rejected because it was sent from a dynamically assigned domain name, instead of a fixed one. I would make the case that blacklisting my system, simply because of the way it's connected is "libelous." My system been branded unwelcome by a self-righteous, imperious tyrant without any just cause or evidence. No, I would not get far in court, and I'm not planning on suing, but I consider this as much of a libelous afront as if someone published a smear article in my local newspaper, or send a letter spuriously condemning me to my employer.

      This sort of behaviour takes the net away from ordinary people and places it squarely in the hands of businesses which can afford thousands of dollars in yearly access fees. Yes, I could get a fixed IP address, if I wanted to pay at least another $600 a year for business account. But not only would it cost me an additional $600+, I would get only 1/3 of my current bandwidth. Do we really want a net in which small users are squozen out? Do we really want only "blessed" sites (read -- only sites with lots of cash) on the net?

    4. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no concept of freedom. No one is required to use MAPS. If you think it sucks then tell people who are using it to stop. Happy to see them sued, hunh? Wait until you get one of those letters. Most people would rather stare down the barrel of a 12 gauge then get sued by a large corporation.

    5. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      &gt Instead I am forced to use the email account of my service provider.

      So fucking what? You can use you ISP's email services and still be l33t.

    6. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by supine · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is likely that you have not been blackholed by MAPS's RBL but by MAPS's DUL. The distinction is important.

      The RBL is for servers known to be relaying or originating spam and is generated by testing of the server in question.

      The DUL is for IP ranges that ISPs submit as "dial-up". This encourages their dynamic IP customers to utilise their SMTP server.

      For a better explanation of the difference compare these two descriptions RBL and DUL.

      marty

      --
      "I can't buy want I want because it's free. Can't be what they want because I'm me." -Corduroy, Pearl Jam
    7. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by jjo · · Score: 2

      MAPS is not saying that you are, or have ever been, a spammer. It's merely saying that you belong to a class of users that tends to generate a lot of spam when making direct SMTP connections. This class of users almost always has the ability to send email indirectly via its ISP's servers, so blocking direct connections will seldom be a problem.

      Furthermore, MAPS is not a tyrant. Tyrants use force, or the threat of force, to enforce their edicts. MAPS uses nothing but persuasion.

    8. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I would hardly say my anger is misplaced. I have never used my system for SPAM, nor will I.
      > I have been using the same IP address for almost two years. My address has not been used for SPAM.
      > I tried to send an email to a friend serviced by another ISP, and was summarily rejected because it was sent from a dynamically
      > assigned domain name, instead of a fixed one. I would make the case that blacklisting my system,
      > simply because of the way it's connected is "libelous."

      Sorry to burst your bubble but you're not being "branded" as spammer but dialup or cable user. Maybe it's even just a matter of some mail admin refusing all mail from sites that don't resolve on a reverse DNS lookup. All three have been abused a lot by spammers so people got wary.

      The fix is easy: use your ISP's mail host to relay mail for you. That's what it's there for. Doing so shows you are not trying to play hide-and-seek with mail server admins. Unless your ISP got himself on some sort of blacklist, you'll be fine.

      If you don't want to do this, there is little recourse. Mail server admins around the whole planet have gotten so sick of spam they will resort to every measure to cut the spam volume down. Blacklists are one method, disallowing connections from hosts that don't reverse resolve is another common one. You have no 'right' to send mail to these people's machines. You may have the privilege to have your ISP's mail server send them mail on your behalf, but that's all.

      The internet used to be about mutual cooperation. Abuse of the net's resources has gotten us to a point where people aren't willing to cooperate anymore, except on more restrictive terms. I know a mail admin who only runs sendmail on his machine while he's in the office so he can hear the disk trash should there be a spam attack. That's pretty restrictive for me. I only use ORBS and MAPS, and access.db for those spammers that make it through, and spam is much reduced.

      Michael

    9. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by kindbud · · Score: 2

      Smarthost instead.

      Oh yeah, great idea. Instead of delivering mail instantly via my own fully-capable MTA, throw all my email into the ISP's queue, where it can sit for hours before being processed. Yeah, right.

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    10. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      given that MAPS and services like it, automatically blackhole email from dynamically served DNS entries, I am quite happy to see them sued, sued into oblivion even.

      MAPS doesn't "blackhole email". MAPS doesn't filter anything. MAPS publishes lists of addresses, which administrators of mail servers are free to use for any purpose they like. (Usually blocking mail, but often just tagging it or filtering it to different folders.) MAPS is one of several competing organizations who offer lists like this, and mail administrators are free to pick among them and their competitors; they are also quite free to use none of them at all.

      If your or your friends are using ISPs that employ a blocking list you don't agree with, stop giving them your money. It's not like there's a lack of ISPs that don't use MAPS' lists.

      And MAPS does not automatically list addresses from dynamic DNS services. One of MAPS' lists (the DUL) lists network ranges of consumer dialup services (note: dynamic IP assignment is not the same thing as dynamic DNS), but that list is entirely seperate from the RBL, and comes with large warnings attached that the addresses listed are probably not spammers. As a consequence, very few companies filter mail based on the DUL.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    11. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by crucini · · Score: 2
      ...given that MAPS and services like it, automatically blackhole email from dynamically served DNS entries...

      I think you are confusing two different issues. Many sites reject mail from IP's that don't have reverse DNS, or which don't resolve to the domain they're claiming to be from. This has nothing to do with MAPS. There is also the possibility that your IP range is on the Dial-up User List (DUL). Pac Bell, in particular, tends to place networks on this list even if they're not dialup. I suggest you query the RBL to find out.
    12. Re:Dynamic DNS Services get blackholed too! by crucini · · Score: 2

      I definitely agree with you that the war on spam is making the net more unfriendly, and imposing a bigger cost on technical individuals than on corporations. The situation you describe is unpleasant, and I understand why you may not want to relay through your ISP's mailserver. But here's why your anger may still be misplaced: MAPS is merely acting as a proxy for many mail admins who do not want to accept mail from dialup and similar addresses. Unfortunately, for most people who make decisions about mail handling, your IP address represents more risk than reward.

  27. Free speech? by Hanzie · · Score: 5, Interesting
    How in hell can posting a list of spammers be illegal when posting a list of abortion doctors you want murdered be protected speech? Families of future victims are listed by name too. And addresses.

    The crossed off names are people who have been murdered since the list went up. Greyed out means they were only wounded.

    --
    ********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
    1. Re:Free speech? by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      Holy shit, this "christian" website is disgusting. An order of magnitude more sickening that goatse.cx.

    2. Re:Free speech? by dmarcov · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because "spam" is technically commerce. The standard of protection for commerical speech is much lower than that for political speech.

      Citations you might find helpful are Bigelow v. Virginia (1975) and the earlier Valentine v. Chrestonson (1942).

      Posting a list of "spammers" is an inducement against commerce -- the reason for posting the information is to reduce commerical traffic, etc.

    3. Re:Free speech? by VB · · Score: 2


      Whoever hosts that site is a terrorist.

      [OT, but hit the link first...]

      --
      www.dedserius.com
      VB != VisualBasic
    4. Re:Free speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like some abortion doctors should sue for restraint of trade then.

    5. Re:Free speech? by Dwonis · · Score: 2

      Spam is not commerce. It's theft of services. My services, and the services of my ISP.

    6. Re:Free speech? by dmarcov · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I disagree. It's not more a theft of services than the space junk mail takes up in your non-virtual mailbox that potentially crowds out (or for that matter even damages) items that you are actually interested in.

      The only difference that occurs to me is that in some instances you as an individual might be paying for your logged-in time. Of course, the same rules should apply to junk e-mail as apply to regular junk mail -- that is being able to opt-out.

      Perhaps it might be a good idea for ISPs to charge soliciters for access to the users on their systems (as a mailer pays the post office). But to label it the rather perjorative "theft", or suggest it should be illegal is a bit much. As many things in a capitalist, free-market (mostly) system -- some things require regulation.

    7. Re:Free speech? by RoaminCatholic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Actually, the majority of the "crossed out" people are women who died during abortions, *not* murdered abortionists.

      --
      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
      Erik Norvelle
      Cre
    8. Re:Free speech? by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      Holy shit, this "christian" website is disgusting.

      Just to clarify, this is not a "christian" web site. Christians don't pull this kind of shit. Don't let people like this allow you to believe the word "Christian" is synonymous with "Stupid evil fucks." It's not. Being a Christian is much more than just proclaiming, "I'm a Christian." You have to walk the walk.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    9. Re:Free speech? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      Lets make it clear that there are a lot of different people in the world with a lot of different basic beliefs and tenets that all call themselves christians.

      I am one of those, for those who didn't already know (feel free to read my comments history before slamming me, you won't find much interesting, but hey ...)

      Some christians have historically believed that killing people 'on God's behalf' is a valid exercise. The Bible itself makes it very clear that whatever it is that God considers worthy of death, he'll do the deed himself ("Vengence is mine, sayeth the Lord"). Anyone acting for him in this area is misled (and misread).

      The people who killed thousands in NYC in the name of Allah claimed to be Muslims.

      The KKK claim to be Christians.

      Hitler claimed to be a Christian ...

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  28. simple solution.. by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A non US company to start making a blackhole list.

    If you were in a country that wasnt under direct US control you could basically have the entire staff moon a camera and respont to expierian's lawyers with the photo.

    anyone in the former USSR care to start a global business?

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:simple solution.. by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Already done. And you know what is funny? Because of the sue happy nature of the common or garden-variety spammer, the people compiling the blocklist are anonymous and will remain so. The only way out is to stop spamming.

      Granted, it smacks of vigilante justice to some, but it works. See this for an example.

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    2. Re:simple solution.. by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      Try some of the open relay lists:

      dev.null.dk
      relays.ordb.or
      orbs.dorkslayers.com
      inputs.orbz.org
      outputs.orbz.org

      etc.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  29. Re:Experian needs to be fought, not just for e-mai by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    All credit reporting companies are corrupt. at a last report I read was that the credit reporting agencies accuracy was 48% and there was a 63% chance that your credit report had 2 or more errors and a 48% chance of serious errors.

    What moron at a bank would trust a data source as reliable as a pathological liar? yet it's done every day.

    Add to this thet they love spamming and you see the credibility and quality of companies like experian. (Oh and the fact that anyone with about $500.00 can have their credit report legally wiped (for the most part) really adds to the trustworthyness.)

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  30. Article Summary. by catsidhe · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From the article:

    Experian enables organizations to find the best prospects and make fast, informed decisions to improve and personalize relationships with their customers. It does this by combining
    sophisticated and intelligent decision-making software and systems with some of the world's most comprehensive databases of information on consumers, businesses, motor vehicles
    and property...

    Translation:
    • Experian knows who you are.
    • Experian knows where you are.
    • Experian knows what you buy.
    • Experian will sell this information to anyone who wants it.
    • Experian wants you to be bombarded^H^H^H^H^H^H exposed to those advertisements which will be most suitable - or failing that, all of them.

    and from the rest of the article:
    • Anyone who thinks they have a right to protect themselves from our 'services' is gravely mistaken.
    • Anyone who thinks they have a right to provide protection from our 'services' is gravely mistaken, and will be sued.
    • Resistance is futile.

    As far as I read this, it seems that Experian is saying that it is illegal to even provide the option of opting out.
    --
    "This is a Hollywood movie: when it comes to the Laws of Physics, they're lucky if they get Gravity!" --- my wife
    1. Re:Article Summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are quite correct: Experian's *main* business is credit reports on consumers. Of course they'd LOVE for opting out of that to be illegal, not just very very very difficult.

      They deserve the fury of hell, IMHO.

  31. Remember... by SiMac · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Some times blackholing can indeed be inappropriate. Above.net (which may be owned by MAPS, I don't remember and don't quote me on that) blackholed sites like macromedia.com and ORBS.

    1. Re:Remember... by Doktor+Memory · · Score: 1

      Above.net (which may be owned by MAPS, I don't remember and don't quote me on that)

      Quote me on this: Would it have killed you to do TWO SECONDS OF RESEARCH before posting something this blatantly stupid and incorrect?

      blackholed sites like macromedia.com and ORBS.

      Macromedia/Shockwave are repeat, unrepentant spammers. It is not possible to get permanently removed from their mailing lists. I couldn't do it and I'm on a first name basis with three of their senior systems staff. I wish more people would block them, but I'm just going to have to content myself with watching them go bankrupt. Buh-bye, parasites.

      ORBS was blackholed only after being repeatedly asked to stop scanning above.net space for open relays. For all of Alan Brown's bluster, the sequence of events was simple: he did it, they asked him to stop, he ignored them, they null-routed him. Alan was really the only person who found it at all surprising, but that's primarily because Alan's a sociopath.

      --

      News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.

    2. Re:Remember... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      BGP4 blackholing (which MAPS half-condones) is stupid when its based on a spam list. Having a list for known abusive networks would be great, that is, they send large numbers of 'abusive' packets that aren't application or protocol specific. In that case, BGP4 blackhole them ... but if they just send spam, block their E-mail servers from sending you mail, don't block your users from downloading their software.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  32. Block experian by dskoll · · Score: 1

    Just block experian.com and the entire class B 167.107.0.0/16 network. That's what I did.

    *plonk*

  33. see what MAPS has to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check
    http://www.mail-abuse.org/pressreleases/2001-10- 03 .html. It seems that this wasn't such a victory to Experian as they claim.

  34. what's this? a troll? here's a pr pointer by ckuhtz · · Score: 1

    http://www.mail-abuse.com/pressreleases/2001-10-03 .html

    Yet another misleading /. headline blurb it would seem.. Big surprise.

    Oh, and of course we should believe everything contained in contradicting press releases. Sic.

    --

    Poof.
  35. Experian's netblocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant



    I was going to post a list of Experian's netblocks, but the Lameness Filter decided that numbers where caps and told me to stop yelling. So if you would like to find out for yourself, here's how:

    workstation$ whois -h whois.arin.net EXPERIAN

  36. What makes me more anoyed at spamers by AnotherBrian · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I do agree that EVERY mailing list MUST be double opt-in. To me this sounds like common sense, but I'm not a $grabbing bastard that will do any thing for an extra buck. The thing that really pisses me off is the fact that the companies can sell my address to hundreds of others without my consent. This is what I think happens all the time:
    1. Sone jerk signs me up for spam from company A
    2. I get spam from A with a 'remove' link in it
    3. I click 'remove' and no more crap from company A
    4. Company A sells my address to company B C D E F... and they probably earn more money from this than they would have earned from my buying something from THEM
    5. I now get 5x the spam F---!
    6. GOTO 2

    I think this reselling of names can be worse than no double opt-in. I know the big companies won't allow this (by buying politicians and lobbyists) on the grounds that thair ill-gotten lists are thair property and can do with it what they wish. I know it would be hard to keep a list of the companies that do this, but I think MAPS should consider upgrading thair service to include several lists that offer variable amounts of protection to ISP admins. Like one list with KNOWN spamers, one with ALLEGED smamers, one with PROVED non-spamers, and one that would be managed by users, kind of like how moderation and meta-moderation works here on /.
  37. EFF? by james_moriarty · · Score: 1

    This sounds like the kind of case EFF would get involved in. Anyone know what their stance is?

  38. MAPS is censorware! by SumDeusExMachina · · Score: 1
    What kind of loss are you suggesting this is? Look at the whole picture here: MAPS is designed for blocking out spam, but you know what it ends up doing? It blocks ALL mail traffic, effectively cutting off certain providers from email services.

    OK, maybe some of the libertarians out there will tell me "well, they had it coming, didn't they? They shouldn't be running open relay mail servers." However, history has shown that there have been many cases of the controllers of MAPS cutting off providers for their own political ends as well as merely cutting off the wrong people in cases of mistaken identity. Make no mistake about it, folks. MAPS is censorware.

    It really comes down to a balancing act that everyone must consider: Am I going to put up with possibly getting cut off from the rest of the world just to avoid the occasional annoying advertisment? I would tend to answer no, but apparently convenience is more important to many "libertarians" out there than freedom.

    --

    Is your company running tools written by ma
    1. Re:MAPS is censorware! by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

      you have any prof that MAPS has been politically motavatied to block providers ?

    2. Re:MAPS is censorware! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps this will reinforce your point:

      http://www.dotcomeon.com/emergency.html

  39. Re:winners or losers? by Parsec · · Score: 1

    I think such "deplorable" actions are usually called "collective action" and "grass roots organisation".

    There's a list further down in this discussion of the domains I'll be putting in my permanent deny list.

  40. How do you wipe your credit report for $500??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the mechanism behind this? I hope it's not one of those scams...

    (and I have clean credit btw)

    1. Re:How do you wipe your credit report for $500??? by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      A local lender was offering this service, It is a national company that files request for removal on every item on your credit report Expierian cannot reposond with a yes or no within the alotted 30 days so therefore they haveto remove the mark on the credit report, at the same time this company submits positive credit reporting under one of the hundred DBA's the company holds.

      It's leagal, and it takes advantage of expierian's inefficency along with the built in inefficency of the other 2 credit reporters.

      BTW: your credit report can vary wildly between all 3 reporting agencies. someone with bad credit on one can get a loan by shopping with some social engineering to find a lender that uses a different reporting agency.

      I had a friend that had horrible credit get his cleaned to almost pristine within 6 months. In 12 months he was getting offers for platinum cards because of the guarenteed positive reporting from the companies he hired.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  41. Middle ground. by james_moriarty · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Has anyone stopped to read MAPS' press release? Here's an clip:

    "Experian has committed to requiring their clients to provide them with lists which contain only those email addresses for which they have obtained the addressee's permission to send them email."

    It appears that MAPS hasn't comprimised its values, it's just made them a little more reasonable. So what's the big deal?

    Holy propaganda batman!
    -Geoff

    1. Re:Middle ground. by Intrinsic · · Score: 0, Troll

      Because they should be able to do whatever the dam well please. How would you like it if I sued you for blocking spam mail that I was tring to send to you ?

    2. Re:Middle ground. by KjetilK · · Score: 2

      That this bit is rubbish. If they do not use confirm subscriptions, they haven't gotten permission. It is as simple as that.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  42. MAPS is no longer free, so do they matter anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did anyone notice their mailservers slow way down last weekend? (doing DNS lookups against blackholes.mail-abuse.org)

    MAPS stopped their free service. (They are now charging $1500USD per mailserver with a 1000 user limit (more users cost more)). And since MAPS is no longer free, how many people will continue to use them and how important will they be in the future?

  43. Only spammers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    use the term 'double opt-in'.

    Ethical marketers who use email know about confirmed subscriptions.

  44. Notice something about the press release? by ckd · · Score: 2

    No contact email address is given. Hmm. Maybe because they don't want to get signed up for all those single opt-in lists?

  45. Re: SPAM by Kasreyn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My ISP does not use MAPS and guess what? I am not flooded with spam. Not one bit. You do not need MAPS to avoid spam.

    Oh really? I double-dog-dare you to go online, in chatrooms, read certain webpages and enter certain data, and have your email address unobscured on major websites like /. 4 months later, if you're not drowning in spam, then I'll apologize.

    Put another way, there are three explanations for your not getting spam without MAPS: Maybe they're just not spamming you. Maybe your ISP is using a non-MAPS blackhole list (gasb! they exist). Or MAYBE the spammers just ain't NOTICED you yet, monkey-boy. New ISP means new email address, duhh.

    -Kasreyn

    --
    Kasreyn: Cheerfully playing the part of Devil's Advocate to hairtrigger /. flamers since 1999.
  46. Free choice could solve this completely by sequence_man · · Score: 1
    It isn't necessary for ISP's to opt in for a RBL to be effective. All we need is full information.
    • An ISP can do nothing--and the black hole either lists them as good or bad.
    • An ISP can opt in--in which case they are treated as above, BUT, it is now listed as having opt'd in.
    • An ISP can opt out. Now its only listing is that it has opted out.

    This is similar to the way google handles copywrite violations--ask and they will remove copywrited material from their cite.


    Of course, many people will want to refuse mail from those who have opt'd out. But that is their choice for which the RBL isn't responsable.


    The principle here is from economics--there is not need to require information to be public. Simply having the lack of information being public is good enough. Anyone who doesn't want to have their information public is considered to have something to hide.

    1. Re:Free choice could solve this completely by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that that is how RBL works....

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  47. Hard to remove.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..but maybe that'd be good.

    If the lesson is 'spam and you die on the net' then maybe the clue would get through?

  48. AND WHAT DO YOU THINK THIS WILL DO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can bet a ton of IT techies will now block all emails from that company. Basically they shot themselves in the foot.

    auto262814@hushmail.com

  49. Black-hole for the producers by jgp · · Score: 1

    MAPS is a dirty job, but someone has to do it.

    Spamming (and harbouring spammers by not standing behind your TOS agreement) is just a dirty job.

  50. the 'christian' web site by dfenstrate · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I went there, and found their page disgusting. So I penned the following response:

    First,
    Let me say that I am pro-life. If you can't handle the responsibility of raising a child, then don't have sex, or use one of the many effective forms of birth control out there.

    That being said, you people are sick. You press for the murder of your brothers and sisters. May I remind you that Jesus also said, "Hate the sin, but love the sinner?" and that God alone will be our Judge? It is blasphemy that you claim to be on God's side. Crimes against society are punishable by society, -by the government, the just representative of the people. Crimes against God are punishible by God only. And before you lambast our government, I'd like to point out yet another quote of our Lord Jesus: "Render unto Ceaser what is Ceaser's" In simpler terms, let the government do it's job.

    If you wish to see those involved in abortion punished in the here and now, then your only just course is to press for abortion to be banned.

    Until then, Keep your venom to yourself. You are no better than the islamic fanatics who ran airplanes into the world trade center, and I hope you have Christian brothers and sisters who can teach you the true meaning of "Love thy neighbor." Your extreme tactics only cause you to be dismissed (and rightly so) by all as sociopaths (unable to distinguish from right and wrong. i.e. murder == wrong. pretending to act for God == wrong). You are terrorists, and as you've seen lately, nothing disgusts our great nation more than those who try to enact change by terror.

    May you find peace and love,
    Michael Gregory

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
  51. Experian can take their spam and shove it... by KC7GR · · Score: 1

    If this is the kind of "settlement" they reached, then they're spammers. Period. I'll be placing Experian's ENTIRE IP range into my domain's 'Deny' list immediately, and they can rot in there for all I care.

    I would imagine that many other SysAdmins, once this news breaks on news.admin.net-abuse.email, will do so as well. I think Experian may well wish, later on, that they had never bullied out this kind of deal. They're going to find it a heck of a lot harder to get out of several thousand local blacklists than they ever would to get out of one.

    Experian, you're a bunch of spamming jerks.

    --

    Bruce Lane, KC7GR,

    Blue Feather Technologies

  52. Interference with contract? by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One thought. Now that MAPS is charging for access to their service, can someone paying for their services consider there to be a contract between MAPS and them wherein MAPS agrees to provide a list of IP addresses that meet it's definition of 'spammer'? If so, and Company A goes to court and prevents MAPS from listing their IP addresses even though they meet MAPS' definition, can RBL subscribers sue Company A for damages due to Company A's interference in MAPS' performance of it's duties under it's contract with them?

  53. Moderators on bad crack again ? by Archfeld · · Score: 1

    "If I sign up for a mailing list, I should NOT have a bunch of nannys insisting that companies waste my time with another verification step.
    I appreciate that they are pushing for opt-in standards, but there is a very fine line between looking out for the rights of consumers and looking to "protect" consumers from themselves.
    Which do I hate more: people who want to exploit me, or people who want to coddle and protect me, whether I want it or not? Tough choice.
    I think I hate the coddlers more. I can always protect myself against exploitation, but I can't always get away from the nannys."

    You know it is pretty sad when a well written intelligent dissenting opinion is marked as a troll. I personally don't agree with Reality Master 101 but his opinion is valid, and his piece is on topic, and did not deserve a troll. Moderation was never a strong suit on /. but this is pathetic.

    --
    errr....umm...*whooosh* *whoosh* Is this thing on ?
  54. Hmm, I dont get it by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    Anyone want to comment on how it is possible to win a suit that involves a group that decides that they dont want mail from spam companies and through technology put's in place safegards that prevents this ?

    I dont know about everyone else but I think its completly rediculious to think that you could get sued for blocking spam on your own computer.
    I really think no person or court has a right to tell a person or a group what they can and cannot do with regards to blocking any mail they deemed nessassary.

  55. Honestly by macdaddy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I can't see how this can be done. The way I see it, it's a violation of freedom of speech. If I say that I have a reason to not want to accept mail from spammer.com and I publicly state that, then that's my constitutional right. Really that's all they are doing. They are publicly saying that they won't accept mail from spammer.com or his netblock and they're making that known publicly. The method in which they let the public gain access to their list of people that thet won't accept email from is by DNS. If another said person of the public happens to decide that they trust my opinion on who I will not accept mail from and use my list of domains and netblocks as their own, then they are excercising their freedom to express themselves. I'm not forcing them to do it. They trust my opinion and that's that. To me it's really that simple. It's nothing more than a car magazine rating a given year's new models and expressing their opinions. If a writer for Car Magazine says that he personally doesn't like car A because it doesn't come in pink and I as a consumer have always based my purchasing decisions off of what that writer believes, then is he at fault just like MAPS? No, the writer isn't. He expressed his opinion and I decided to trust his opinion. If a buddy of mine tells me that he received spam from newspammer.com and I either a) trust what he told me or b) he proves to me that they spammed him (with the message and headers) than there's no reason why I can't trust his opinion and add newspammer.com to my list as well. If I decide to add a way for a spammer to have his domain removed from my personal list then there isn't any reason why I can't. If I say they first have to wear a baby blue tutu and cowboy boots and run through the streets of Dallas before I'll remove them, that's well within my right. After all the list is mine, not there's. I'm entitled to my opinion. Does anyone else see it as simply put as I do? To me it's just that simple.

    I'll tell you one more thing that's very simple. Experian has earned a very simple and very permanent REJECT entry in my Sendmail access lists. Simple.

  56. Anyone know Experian Full IP range ? by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    I plan on blocking that hole IP range on my network.

  57. Re:MAPS is no longer free, so do they matter anymo by Intrinsic · · Score: 1

    I think its important to point out that a for all the work that is involved in keeping this type of system up to date and running they should definatly get some type of compensation, you cant do this kind of work for free forever ? dont you think ?

  58. ^ MOD THIS UP ^ by Dwonis · · Score: 1, Offtopic
    Mod that one up!

    That's an interesting idea. It actually sounds solid, too.

  59. too often too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone complains about spam. Everyone does something about it. Yet has anyone noticed that much of the internet is being blacklisted. E.g. webhosters who want to offer EASY email services to their customers are automaticly black listed. In business your email services have to be easy to use and setup you can't expect joe shmoe to know enough to decently set up a client to do secure email (authenticated). Also companies get blacklisted for 1 customer who abuses their computers (scripts etc), then all the clientell of that company are now under the spam blacklist umbrella. What a pain!
    Blacklisting is too indiscriminat and quick to pass blame. Blacklisting probably won't help since all a spammer needs nowadays is a web account w/ CGI access. They just make their own daemon and budda bing.

    If I can't get email from most large ISPs then why should I use the blacklist. It's really quite ignorant of the human condition and spammer tactics.

    1. Re:too often too much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Easy configuration" has nothing to do with it. ISPs don't get blacklisted unless they refuse to make and enforce a policy of not doing business with spammers.

  60. Rubbish (Re:MAPS settled) by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
    At any point that I am walking down a public street, a salesman could approach me and launch right into a sales pitch. I can dodge around him, turn, say no, something like that...but it's still going to change my initial plan of walking uninhibited down the street.

    Yeah, you can dodge around him; after parting with 10 $ to make him go away.

    Probably most worldwide internet users use a PPP connection and pay a per minute charge to be informed about herbal viagra, penis extension pills, or Britney Spears nudie pics.

    You sir, have quite an egoistic me-me view on the subject.

    No need to thank me...

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  61. Manual blackhole by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

    Sever them from the net. Firewall their IPs, bounce their mail domains, manually, and never turn those firewallings back off.

  62. Pot, meet kettle... by plimsoll · · Score: 1

    MAPS: community-maintained, rates certain IP's as unlikely to observe netiquette.

    Experian: community-maintained, rates certain individuals as unlikely to repay bills.

    --
    Snickersnee3: Build your own 3-watt Luxeon Star headlamp from scratch
  63. Sysadmins don't forgive. Sysadmins don't forget. by KMSelf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Rick Moen has a standard message for those who would sue MAPS. You see, MAPS actually wins by losing.

    Time to update those DNS records and MTA rulesets, people.

    My own last message to Experian:

    Subject: Experian settles with MAPS -- Welcome to the Blackhole of Death

    You've been added manually.

    By me.

    By 100,000 other sysadmins.

    Or is it only 10,000?

    Or is it 1,000,000?

    Who knows?

    But you're in named.conf.

    You're in Sendmail, Exim, Qmail, Postfix, and Exchange reject rulesets.

    And you'll never get out.

    Ever.

    Because.

    You sued MAPS.

    You can't root us out.

    You can't make up, fly straight, and appeal your listing.

    You lost by winning.

    Welcome to the Black Hole of Death.

    Remember: no one can hear you.

    And no one cares.

    --

    What part of "gestalt" don't you understand?

  64. MAPS deserves our full support! by Per+Abrahamsen · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They don't arbitrarily blackhole any companies.

    They do keep a list of servers whose administrators that does not want to cooperate in the fight against spam for whatever reason.

    It is up to the mail server administrators to decide whether they want to accept mail from those servers. That is a perfectly fair and honorable thing to do.

    Why excatly do you think I should be denied the choice to refuse to accept mail from people who will not help fight the one thing that have made mail nearly useless to me?

    And why exactly do you think that giving me that choise is as morally questionable as trying to force me to accept and pay for junk I don't want?

    1. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 1
      I am aware of what MAPS does and how they operate. I am also aware that they do not force anyone to use their list.

      I would never even suggest that you should be denied the right to accept or deny traffic to your MTA(s) from / to whomever you please. I never said that, I never even inferred it. I think it's rather inflamatory that you might hijack this conversation in that manner.

      I said: I agree with the idea of MAPS, but I disagree with their tactics. By "their tactics" I mean forcing double opt-in for all mailing lists.

      It is assenine to expect every individual who runs a mailing list to setup their list for double opt-in. While I agree, it's "The Right Way To Do Things" that is a far cry from saying, "Do it this way or ELSE!"

      MAPS seems to totally ignore the history of human politics with this practice. The past teaches us that change in complex systems (ergo: email / mailing lists / spamming practices) requires consolidated standards bodies and a unified lobbying effort for change. MAPS today strikes me much more as a protection racquet than the latter.

      Oh, and have I mentioned that they frequently make mistakes?

      Cheers,
      -- RLJ

    2. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by crucini · · Score: 2
      It is assenine to expect every individual who runs a mailing list to setup their list for double opt-in.

      First of all, "double opt-in" is spammer jargon for opt-in. What spammers call "single opt-in" is not opt-in at all, but merely arbitrary addtion of a mail address to a list without permission of the address's owner. By using this phrase, you paint yourself as an ally or dupe of spammers.

      System administrators are responsible for keeping their machines and domains running smoothly. That includes blackholing IP ranges that cause massive harm. MAPS is just a way for a bunch of sysadmins to pool their knowledge.

      The past teaches us that change in complex systems (ergo: email / mailing lists / spamming practices) requires consolidated standards bodies and a unified lobbying effort for change.

      Actually, MAPS is winning. SPAM has a very bad name on the internet and large corporations shun it. Spammers are driven to more extreme and more criminal tactics, which show their stripes more clearly. Spamming operations frequently involve stolen credit card numbers. If we ever transition to secure credit cards, I guess spammers will break into buildings at night to use their connectivity. Or else they might finally give up.
    3. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 1
      First off, jargon:

      Double Opt-In: I sign up for alist, it emails the address I used to sign up, I must respond to be added to the list. A great idea for popular lists.

      Single Opt-In: I sign up for a list using any address. That address is added to the list. Not ideal, but probably the norm for most non-technical list moderators.

      I appolgize for "painting myself as an ally or dupe of the spammers," I won't let that happen again!

      The statistics I read about MAPS all say that they are effictivly blocking about 2% of SPAM. Now, you and I both know that statistics lie, but I don't hear MAPS screaming to the rooftops that they and their legions of admins who use the RBL are having a greater net effect. For the sake of arguement, let's say they're blocking 10% of all SPAM. Even with that generous estimate, I am afraid the only war they are winning is political.

      Thanks for your thoughts,
      - RLJ

    4. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by WNight · · Score: 2

      MAPS doesn't properly disclose why companies got on the list. They blackhole Spamford Wallace right along with some company that simply denies their right to scan the mail servers.

      As such, I think they do cross the line to libel (or slander) by implying that any company on their list is spamming or harbouring spam. Many admins just don't like their heavy-handed ways, yet are blackmailed into cooperating.
      If MAPS was a more open process, and democratic, where all communications with the offending admins were posted and people got to vote to block them, I'd support it more. As is, with it a black-box system where you simply have to trust MAPS... No.

    5. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by crucini · · Score: 2
      The term "double opt-in" was coined by the Direct Marketing Association as an alternative to "opt-in" because it has the connotation of being overly burdensome. As for the effectiveness of MAPS, check out this ISP status page which I found at random. Here's what I gleaned from a quick look at their graphs:
      1. The majority of their inbound mail is spam.
      2. The MAPS RSS (relay spam stopper) accounts for the vast majority of spam stopped.
      3. The MAPS RBL accounts for the smallest amount of spam stopped.

      Some thoughts on relating this data to your post: The RSS acts directly, by blocking spam from hopelessly open relays. The RBL acts indirectly by placing pressure on the owner of a netblock. RBL nominations can be based on spam support as well as spam origination. Therefore, the fact that the RBL directly stops very little spam does not necessarily mean it's ineffective. The RBL is a deterrent to harboring spam. Maybe this is what you mean when you say "the only war they are winning is political."

      The RBL has made it difficult to brazenly maintain a spam support website.
    6. Re:MAPS deserves our full support! by Rev.LoveJoy · · Score: 1
      Now that is really interesting...

      Thanks for the link,
      - RLJ

  65. Independent action by victims by smoyer · · Score: 1
    Another interesting way of dealing with spammers would be for all recipients to create autoresponders that sent a request for removal from their mailing lists to the sending host and ...say 20 of their other corporate e-mail accounts (like the president of the company maybe).

    From a political side, this would create a tremendous amount of mail that had to be separated when entering their e-mail system. More volume than anyone is willing to read IMHO. The chosen addressees could experience the thrill of receiving "spam volumes" of e-mail, with all of the mail being legitimate.

    From a networking standpoint, make sure to include ALL the original content from their advertising, so that they can also experience the load on their networks that they can cause an ISP.

    I don't see any reason why MAPS couldn't list the e-mails of 20 people in each organization who you could "e-mail for removal from the mailing list" for both the blacklisted spammers and spammers who cannot be blacklisted (Let's assume that Experion is just the first).

    Just my two cents, smoyer

    1. Re:Independent action by victims by smoyer · · Score: 1

      Hey :) Another benefit (from a networking standpoint) to replying to all their mail is the potential "network outages" caused by all that traffic. Can anyone say DDDOS (Drastically Distributed Denial of Service - everyone needs a little aliteration).

    2. Re:Independent action by victims by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      No, can't agree. The problem with spam is the bandwidth it wastes. Spammers steal bandwidth. This would only waste more bandwidth, and I seriously doubt it would have any effect on the amount of spam at all.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  66. How is it a crime?? by Chas · · Score: 1

    The network admins/owners have a right to decide what does and does not cross their network.

    How is publishing a list of known spammers, which people either opt to use or opt to NOT use a crime?

    Can this suck for Joe Random User? Yeah. But he's not the one who has to pay for every bit of bandwidth sucked down by various spamhaus.

    And with umpty-bajillion ISPs on the planet, it's not like he doesn't have choices in avoiding MAPS.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  67. Web pages and email reversed by PsychoKick · · Score: 1

    Consider this:
    - The recipient has to pay for all the email he recieves, irregardles of whether he wanted it or not.
    - The webmaster has to pay for all the page views he gets, irregardless of whether he wanted them or not.

    Shouldn't it work the opposite way? Can't we come up with a new system/protocol that does so?

    Or... swap the two existing systems? HTML emails are already a minor curse; perhaps we can somehow wrest a beneficial effect from it? And it shouldn't be too hard to develop an app that can use webspace as a means to communicate simple text messages to intended recipients only.

    Okay, I'm rambling a bit, and I don't profess to be an expert on these subjects, and perhaps people are already too entrenched in how things are currently done, but geez, there's gotta be a better way to do all of this than the headache we have right now.

  68. MAPS press release by Logic · · Score: 1

    Since the article body only referenced the Experian press release, I thought a few people might be interested in the press release from the other side. It reads a little differently, but the gist appears to be the same; opt-in is not required.

    That being said, since they went commercial, their value to the community as a whole has been significantly lower. I would recommend people use alternative listings at this point.

    --
    -Ed Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas.
  69. I see this as a victory for business. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 1

    I don't think that anyone has the right to tell a business how to run things. Granted, if the business is sending outright SPAM (truly unsolicited e-mail where they purchased a list, or gone out and grabbed a bunch of e-mail addresses with web/nntp crawlers), then they should be criticized and/or punished accordingly.

    However, if a company wants to use single opt-in, that's their right. If the company maintains subscription lists, IP addresses and/or message headers of the people that subscribed (as we do), to prove WHO subscribed an e-mail address, that should be enough.

    There are these "watchdog" organizations out there that "police" SPAM. I have very low opinions about people who write a Perl script that reads in an e-mail header, pulls down all of the ISPs involved, and screams "This is SPAM" to abuse@blah.net and abuse@foo.com. That sawwed-off shot-gun approach is not only inaccurate, it wastes a lot of time for all parties involved if the "watchdog" organization isn't even really looking into things.

    One service (SpamCop) constantly accuses our company of sending SPAM. We respond with the IP address or the person who subscribed them to our list, date/time stamp, and the URL of the page that states the conditions of the submission/subscription, but that doesn't matter to them. They just want us to adhere to their demands of double opt-in. Imagine that -- here they have the IP address of the actual perpetrator, date/time stamp -- that's plenty of evidence to find out who the real villian is.

    Though I cannot speak about Experian and what they do, I can say that this is a small victory for legitmate businesses that run legitimate services and maintain legitimate mailing lists.

    At this time, we're looking for other companies that maintain legitimate e-mail lists/services and have had issues with SpamCop. Specifically, if your company has suffered any downtime, loss of revenue, or any loss of service due to claims made by SpamCop that were false or inaccurate, please contact us via e-mail (neil@whatUseek.com)

    1. Re:I see this as a victory for business. by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      However, if a company wants to use single opt-in, that's their right. If the company maintains subscription lists, IP addresses and/or message headers of the people that subscribed (as we do), to prove WHO subscribed an e-mail address, that should be enough.

      And if I and 100,000 other sysadmins want to blackhole your ass into oblivion, that's our right as well. As for suing Spamcop: Spamcop doesn't accuse you; users do. You DO know that actual people are submitting the spam to Spamcop, don't you? Or did you think they just have a script running that harasses people at random?

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    2. Re:I see this as a victory for business. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 1

      Of course we know people are doing it -- but the script doesn't even do any investigative work at all. What if I were to sign up for a newsletter, and then later send it in to SpamCop? Are you telling me that the SpamCop script has some type of intelligent filter to know whether or not my complaint is legitimate or that I did/did-not sign up?

    3. Re:I see this as a victory for business. by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      What if I were to sign up for a newsletter, and then later send it in to SpamCop? Are you telling me that the SpamCop script has some type of intelligent filter to know whether or not my complaint is legitimate or that I did/did-not sign up?

      Of course not. The software must assume the user is reporting spam. You can't expect it to be able to tell whether or not the user is lying. Therefore, the burden of proof lies not on Spamcop, but on the user claiming to have received the spam. Spamcop shouldn't even enter into the equation.

      Any business that has a problem with users mistaking actual subscriptions for spam needs to rethink their policies. While it does happen that someone will sign up for a mailing list and then later report it as spam, it's a rare occurance unless something is inherently wrong with the way the list is being run. Mailing lists should have a two step opt-in process, with the second step being a reply emailed from the user. A simple form on a web page with no confirmation from the email address submitted invites trouble. Secondly, removal instructions should be proudly displayed on every piece of email sent to the subscribers, and they should be simple. The easiest way is to provide a URL where users can unsubscribe themselves.

      If your company has problems with opt-in users accusing you of spamming them, that problem lies not with Spamcop nor with your users, but rather with your policies and methods used in operating your distribution lists. Take responsibility for this, fix the problem at it's source and the spam reports will go away.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    4. Re:I see this as a victory for business. by crucini · · Score: 2
      I don't think that anyone has the right to tell a business how to run things.

      Really? Let's just abolish the government then, and let businesses do whatever they want. But wait a minute. Suppose a business B1 wants to null route another business B2 because it's flooding the network with junk. Does anyone have the right to tell B1 how to run things? What if B1 shares the info with B3, B4, and B5, all of whom object to floods of junk? Don't they have the right to blackhole the offender? You can't complain because you don't think that anyone has the right to tell a business how to run things. Your position is self-contradictory.
      One service (SpamCop) constantly accuses our company of sending SPAM. We respond with the IP address or the person who subscribed them to our list, date/time stamp, and the URL of the page that states the conditions of the submission/subscription...

      Your company is a spam house, pure and simple. Even if the log information you offer is legit, which is open to question, using it would require the cooperation of the ISP that owns that address. It also involves substantial work on the part of the injured party, all to end up at a dialup account that was either stolen or disconnected for abuse eight hours after it was activated.

      That's why the pressure will rightfully be placed on your company, because you are the people running a "single opt-in" (which means no opt-in) list. Eventually you will cause enough harm that you will be RBL'd.
  70. Hey, bitch at your ISP instead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guess what? MAPS didn't block your ISP from sending email. Rather, they told every ISP who wanted to listen to MAPS that your ISP sent spam and therefore everyone should ignore all email from them until your ISP fixed it.

    While I understand your point of view, the problem is not MAPS, the problem is jackass admins like those at your ISP not fixing their shit for the rest of the world. The Internet is a public network, and that means that every person on it is responsible to keep their boxen configured correctly, and not to allow spam and other shit onto the network. If you don't keep your end up to snuff, then everyone who subscribes to MAPS is basically going to give you the finger and ignore you. These are the rules, created not by MAPS, but by all those ISPs subscribing to MAPS. "We ignore jerks who don't fix their shit" is what they're saying.

    So, be mad at your clueless ISP admins for not doing their damn job. It's them who provide you with connectivity. It's them who got their own asses blackholed. If they'd just fix their stuff, then they wouldn't be blackholed, now would they? Put the blame where the blame really is.

  71. Block their whole damn IP range by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Done and done.

    Experian, you just got blocked to 100,000 customers with one change to my router settings. Not just email, but all access. Period. And guess what? You're not getting removed. Lovely, isn't it? I don't want anything coming from your network to mine or vice versa. Deal with it.

    Every other person on the planet is judging you by your actions and drawing their own conclusions. Those of us with the power to do so trust in MAPS, and you just said "we like spammers".

    Well, we (the subscribers to MAPS) don't like spammers. So bye bye. Internet access will be fun for you guys when you can't actually access anything.

  72. Re:Free for individual and Non-Profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You said you were able to do DNS against blackholes.mail-abuse.org. So, did you pay?

    It's still free for individuals and non-profits. I use it, although it's at the bottom of my blackhole queries (after ordb, orbz, orbl, null.dk, isirosoft). mail-abuse.org blocks about 25% of the spam. Ordb blocks more. My own deny list blocks even more.

  73. I think it's great that Experian won by Control-Z · · Score: 1
    MAPS has no real right to block commerce on the Internet. Yes, I know that sysadmins choose to use MAPS, but all their users don't. The collateral damage is substantial.

    I don't think Experian is the type to send those fly-by-night "Make Money Fast" or "Lose 4 pounds in 2 hours" e-mails. Experian has paying clients and has the right to send e-mail to people who have indicated interest. I'm sure the e-mails they send don't have forged headers like most spam.

    I'm glad MAPS got shot down. First the people behind MAPS work to build the Internet (with things like BIND and sendmail), then they change their mind and punch it full of holes. Something needs to be done about spam, but MAPS isn't the right solution.

    1. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

      If you don't think MAPS is the solution, don't use it.

      Don't deprive others of their right to use or not use such a list.

      It is voluntary. I can guarantee that Experian will have a permanent home in my blacklist. If they ever spam me, I'll press harassment charges.

      --
      The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
    2. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      Yes, I know that sysadmins choose to use MAPS, but all their users don't. The collateral damage is substantial.

      If you don't like the policies of your ISP, complain to them, or find a new one. Or setup your own server, get a dedicated IP and don't enable MAPS. Or get a free email address from Hotmail, Lord knows they don't care about blocking spam. You have plenty of options here; quit bitching and exercise them.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    3. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by AnonymousEponymous · · Score: 1

      As a long term solution that provides a realistic and effective mechanism to stop spam the experian ruling provides a solid basis and that is get a 'Court Order'.

      Now if we could just get Congress (in the US at least) to pass an effective law against SPAM that would allow users to sue to block address domains from receiving unsoliticated commerical email.

      Until then MAPS will remain an imperfect solution that is open to lawsuits.

    4. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by Control-Z · · Score: 1
      I never said my ISP was the problem, I've asked them if they use MAPS and they responded with an emphatic "NO". That's why I'm still with them. I'll filter my own e-mail, thank you.

      What I am saying is your average user shouldn't have the hassle of finding an ISP that doesn't censor his e-mail for him.

    5. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by Control-Z · · Score: 1
      I never said my ISP was the problem, I've asked them if they use MAPS and they responded with an emphatic "NO". That's why I'm still with them. I'll filter my own e-mail, thank you.

      What I am saying is your average user shouldn't have the hassle of finding an ISP that doesn't censor his e-mail for him.

      And finally, Hotmail does use MAPS if you enable it. They started early this year. Why don't you figure out the facts before you post?

    6. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by Control-Z · · Score: 1
      My using it or not using it is not the issue. What gives MAPS the right to block legitimate e-mail from being sent?

      I don't think sysadmins should blindly trust the MAPS list. Yes it works, but at what cost?

    7. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      And finally, Hotmail does use MAPS if you enable it.

      However, Hotmail does not force you to use it, which was my whole point: You have options. Nobody is being forced to use MAPS. Even people stuck with a MAPS subscribing ISP can get a free email account that is not subject to MAPS filtering.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    8. Re:I think it's great that Experian won by crucini · · Score: 2
      Experian has paying clients and has the right to send e-mail to people who have indicated interest.

      Many spammers have paying clients. Why do you think that this legitimizes their activity? As for a "right to send email," you are talking about making a TCP connection to a box owned by someone else. You do not have an absolute right to connect to someone else's computer against his will. Even if you have "paying clients".

      First the people behind MAPS work to build the Internet (with things like BIND and sendmail), then they change their mind and punch it full of holes.

      It sure looks strange, when you put it that way. How about this: first they built the infrastructure, then they kept it clear of junk.

      Something needs to be done about spam, but MAPS isn't the right solution.

      Great. So while you're working on the right solution, please don't be offended that more practical-minded people just don't accept traffic from malicious companies.
  74. Lawyer: not quite by hawk · · Score: 2
    I am a lawyer, but htis is not legal advice. If you need legal advice, contact an attorney licensed in your jurisdcition.


    The issuance of a TRO should not be taken as meaning *anything*. TRO's are issued as an emergency measure to maintain the status quo, and are issued without hearing on the requestof one party. They don't have any finding on the issues; they are just meant to prevent permanent damage pending a hearing on a temporary injunction (which is still not a full ruling on the merits) pending the final outcome of litigation.


    hawk, esq.

    1. Re:Lawyer: not quite by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      I wasn't aware of the difference between a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction (I'm guessing what I said applies more to a preliminary injunction). Thanks for clearing it up.

    2. Re:Lawyer: not quite by hawk · · Score: 2
      gladly. :)


      also, even the preliminary injunction has a rathyer relaxed standard of proof. A "reasonable likelihood" of prevailing on the merits must be shown--but the facts may turn out otherwise (and the interpretation of the law may change). Recall that an appeals court overturned the injunction agains windows 95, claiming this standard hadn't been met--only to have the DoJ wipe up the courtroom with microsoft at trial.


      hawk, esq.

  75. Re:Experian needs to be fought, not just for e-mai by Control-Z · · Score: 1
    Maybe Experian threatened to destroy the credit rating of the MAPS guys.

  76. You're an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think that anyone has the right to tell a business how to run things

    You're either a liar, or a hypocrite.

    At this time, we're looking for other companies that maintain legitimate e-mail lists/services and have had issues with SpamCop. Specifically, if your company has suffered any downtime, loss of revenue, or any loss of service due to claims made by SpamCop that were false or inaccurate, please contact us via e-mail

    Hmm, seems like you're saying that you want to tell Spamcop how to run their business!

    One service (SpamCop) constantly accuses our company of sending SPAM .... they have the IP address of the actual perpetrator, date/time stamp -- that's plenty of evidence to find out who the real villian is.

    First off, you're missing the point.

    Second, they already know who the real villain is: YOU.

    You're missing the point because you are allowing people to abuse the email system. The point is that PEOPLE ARE GETTING UNSOLICITED BULK EMAIL FROM YOU, AND YOU ARE DOING NOTHING ABOUT IT.

    The reason that you're the villain is because you allow anyone to use your "service" to harrass others. Just because you track who does it doesn't make you clean. To take your actions to a real-world example, if you had a gun, and you allowed someone to take the gun whenever they chose, and shoot someone, would you say "Hey, we didn't pull the trigger, we have the name and address of the person who did, so we're innocent!"

    WRONG. It's your gun. You KNOW that it's being used to harm someone, and yet you don't care.

    Opt-in with confirmation is the only way to operate a mailing list. If you don't do it, and you know people are abusing your service, then you're just as guilt as the person doing the subscribing.

    1. Re:You're an idiot. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 1

      I'm not the hypocrite. Let SpamCop run their business -- I'm just looking for other businesses who have fallen victim to half-done investigative work as to who is really responsible for the subscription.

      This is not a gun, and we are not killing people. But indeed, if someone took my gun (for which I am a legal gun owner), and illegally used it to hurt someone, no, I am not responsible -- the trigger-puller is responsible. I'm assuming you'd just go ahead and sue the gun manufacturer as well? It is the abuser that should be punished because, you see, all of our terms are clearly stated on our web site.

      Listen, not many third-party "I-want-to-use-this-service-to-abuse-some-e-mail-a ddress" people are abusing our service. Nearly ALL of our complaints are from people who have gone to our service, signed up, received a newsletter (because it is clearly stated in our terms that if you do sign up or use our service, you are subscribing to our newsletter) and then complain about it later.

      We have the IP addresses and date/time stamps to prove it.

      Why are you so emotionally charged about this? I did not slam SpamCop -- after all, they're a for profit business, let them do what they want to do. However, their demands for us to go "double-opt-in" are none of his business, nor yours. As for us "not caring" or "US" being the real villain -- what's all that about?

      You can't just bunch all business who broadcast e-mail together. We send out newsletters, usage statistics, and other subscription based e-mails with single-click opt-outs. We store IP addresses of the subscribers. You see, it was solicited, completely and entirely.

      If I sent pizzas, magazines, taxis, and C.O.D. merchandise orders to your house -- are you telling me that you would start to bitch and moan about pizza joints, magazine distributors, taxi cab companies, and mail order merchandise houses? Is that who you'd go after? I think not. You'd go after the person who was sending all of these items to you. Now THAT is a far better analogy than a gun.

    2. Re:You're an idiot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone took my gun (for which I am a legal gun owner), and illegally used it to hurt someone, no, I am not responsible -- the trigger-puller is responsible.

      If you had cause to know that they were going to do it (ie. SOMEONE TOLD YOU), and you still did nothing about it, then you are responsible. Period, end of story.

      are you telling me that you would start to bitch and moan about pizza joints, magazine distributors, taxi cab companies, and mail order merchandise houses? Is that who you'd go after?

      First time, yes. But if the same pizza business repeatedly disturbed me at 3AM, and said "We're just delivering it because someone told us to." Then yes, I'd go get a restraining order against the pizza place.

      I am an ISP - and one of our clients runs a mailing list, with no confirmation. Eventually, someone did a joe-job on someone, and we got a complaint via spamcop. We brought this up with our client, and he immediately added a confirm option to all new subscriptions.

      Now, we are a responsible ISP. Our client is a responsible mailer.

      If you were a responsible mailer, you would implement a confirm option, but you're not. You're a spammer.

      You are STILL missing the point. The point is that you are harrassing people. (Yes, YOU are harrassing people.)

    3. Re:You're an idiot. by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 1

      No, we are NOT harrassing people. What about false complaints, Mr. ISP? What about the people who DID sign up -- full proof of hostname/IP match? What do you say then? They have the right to send in some e-mail to a Perl-script-kiddie that yells "abuse@isp1.com" and "abuse@isp2.com", and waste OUR company resources?

      You see -- you're grouping in legitmate businesses with casino-viagara-porn-weight-loss-spam-mailers. It's not the same, and your side's demands for double-opt in? Make a law, and we'll obey it. But for now, we're sticking to our "guns" -- and that is, find the real culprit who signed up this person.. because if that was their intent, JUST TO SIGN UP SOMEONE ELSE AND HARRASS SOMEONE ELSE, surely, there lies the possibility that they'll just do it again.

      Heck, I'm also guessing that you're also the type to bitch and moan about receiving a confirmation e-mail that you didn't request, right?

    4. Re:You're an idiot. by Harik · · Score: 1
      find the real culprit who signed up this person.. because if that was their intent, JUST TO SIGN UP SOMEONE ELSE AND HARRASS SOMEONE ELSE, surely, there lies the possibility that they'll just do it again.

      Which would work, except despite the fact you get thousands of complaints, you never block the ones abusing your system. Now, if that's an invitation for me to come hax0r your servers and put the blocking code in for you, I'll accept. However, since you refuse to do it, you're the bad guy here. Putting a submit-form 'MAILBOM THIS ADDRESS' on the web and saying "Hey, it's not our fault! W.X.Y.Z submitted it!" means (da dum!) you're a twit.

      BTW, thanks for pointing out the fact your company is a spamhaus, I'll be sure to add it to the block list for another 10000 customers. Enjoy!

      --Dan

  77. MAPS should help us all comply by shutton · · Score: 1

    I suggest that MAPS provide an additional "map" of all the IPs used by parties that they've lost law suits with (or simply agreed not to list). The documentation for the map should include rules to explicitly allow mail from those networks, and discourage you from tampering with that ruleset.



    It's the right thing to do...

    --
    -Scott Hutton
    1. Re:MAPS should help us all comply by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and so would the Taliban, if we let them.

  78. MAPS needs to be more open by fizbin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The main issue I have with MAPS is that they make no distinction between companies/sites that produce software used for mass-emailing (which could be spamming, but could also be used to send out messages to an opt-in list), companies/sites that sell lists of email addresses, and actual SPAM sources. Instead, they use a broad brush and declare "These are all spammers". If they offered different classifications (and it wouldn't be hard - different IP addresses for different categories of offense), and allowed individual server administrators to choose how large a brush they wanted to use against spam, then I'd have less of a problem with them tracking also companies that produce bulk email software, since those companies would be blocked only by the system administrators that explicitly wished those sources to be blocked.

    The whole MAPS vs ORBS thing has also made me conclude that both sides in that debate are not worthy of my support.

  79. quantitative measurement by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    How about measuring the effect of this?

    Tracert or some other time measurement, and establish a baseline. Over the next week or so see what kind of increase there is. (This kind of networking problem is not my strong spot, so I hope someone can follow up on this)

    Thanks

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  80. What we need... by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    Is a nuremburg files for spammers. I bet that would be a popular site.

    Too bad the actual killing part is illegal.

    "The only reason some people are alive is because its illegal to kill them."

    (Heinlein? - sounds like a Lazarus Long witicism)

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  81. Re:Sysadmins don't forgive. Sysadmins don't forget by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

    Anyone published a list of their IPs on Slashdot yet?

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  82. The other side speaks... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2

    There are always two sides to a PR war. I was wondering why the MAPS URL wasn't in the original article...

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  83. Re:Experian needs to be fought, not just for e-mai by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    Time for revenge.

    Write to them and demand that they stop selling your credit info. (If you do this for all 3 credit bureaus, your credit card offer snail spam will disappear within 3 months. I only get them from my mortgage company occasionaly)

    I don't know if you can demand that they delete all info from their database on you or not. What happens if everyone here tells them:

    "You are hereby expressly prohibited from maintaining/dispensing any information about me to anyone for any purpose. If you violate this demand, you agree to pay the sum of $1000.00 US per incident. This agreement is not negotiable."

    I don't know if you can force them to delete you from the database, but you can force them to stop selling your name and info.

    Lets find out...

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  84. This doesn't click by kindbud · · Score: 2
    From MAPS' statememt about the asettlement:

    Mitchell continued "By reaching this settlement both sides avoid the very real risks associated with going to trial. Furthermore, neither side can take any action against the other without the permission of the Court, and there are substantial penalties provided for a breach of the agreement. And, of course, we are still free to choose to accept or reject email from them on our own personal networks."

    They used to say they wanted to get sued, so they could establish precedent that MAPS activities are legal. But they keep settling. What gives? This is not how to establish precedent.

    --
    Edith Keeler Must Die
  85. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Taliban are trumpeting a settlement with US-DOD here, where US-DOD agreed not to carpet-bomb them without a UN mandate, and agreed that the Taliban didn't need to extradite Bin Laden. Looks like a loss to me.

  86. I work for experian by oliverthered · · Score: 1

    This story makes me laugh, we have web and mail filters that block everything (well almost) with a 'this page is not suitable for' message, It's good to see experian (who also keep 'big brother' type database) getting blocked.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  87. State of Ememrgency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    In a state of emergency, do you really want your email censored by Big Brother?

    Extortionate vigilante Paul Vixie doesn't even consider the WTC tragedy afternath a compelling reason to suspend blocking on humanitarian grounds:

    http://www.dotcomeon.com/emergency.html

  88. Actually.... by CharlieG · · Score: 2

    I get the whole domain forwared to except 2 addresses (My Parents), so I do get them. It's still only 20 a day or so

    --
    -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
  89. That's been it, folks by frost22 · · Score: 1

    If this is correct, MAPS is dead, effectively today. What this suit has proven that you can strongarm MAPS into submission by suing them. From now on that is exactly what every affected spammer will do.

    MAPS's success has always rested on their perceived strength. Now, nobody will listen to them any more.

    I don't care for those whiners that complain that one of their spam tolerating buddies got busted by MAPS. They can just get lost.

    But nonetheless, MAPS decision to settle was wrong. Even if they were afraid to loose in court, they should have accepted it and gone under fighting, instead of submitting to the The Enemy.

    Die, Spammer Die !

    f.

    --
    ...and here I stand, with all my lore, poor fool, no wiser than before.