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What Happens To Bounced @Donotreply.com E-Mails

An anonymous reader writes "The Washington Post's Security Fix blog today features a funny but scary interview with a guy in Seattle who owns the domain name donotreply.com. Apparently, everyone from major US banks to the Transportation Security Administration to contractors in Iraq use some variation on the address in the "From:" field of all e-mails sent out, with the result that bounced e-mails go to the owner of donotreply.com.'With the exception of extreme cases like those mentioned above, Faliszek says he long ago stopped trying to alert companies about the e-mails he was receiving. It's just not worth it: Faliszek said he is constantly threatened with lawsuits from companies who for one reason or another have a difficult time grasping why he is in possession of their internal documents and e-mails.'"

8 of 286 comments (clear)

  1. Re:WTF by iamhigh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, if you are signing up for a network management seminar, or something of the like, then you might also be the person that gets abuse@yourcompany.com, admin@yourcompany.com, it@yourcompany.com and a host of other generic email addresses. So perhaps you don't want them to even have your domain name?

    --
    No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
  2. Sort of like copying to file... by ShaunC · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For a long time, I had the screen name "File" on AOL. I'm not sure where the practice originates (perhaps Lotus), but many, many AOL users would compose an email and cc it to "File" thinking they were saving a copy for themselves. I wound up with all sorts of interesting stuff over the years.

    --
    Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
  3. Re:Stupid on both sides by EdIII · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think he will give it up. He says he, "receives millions of wayward e-mails each week".

    I operate an email servicing company. The costs of the bandwidth alone for millions of emails each week is NOT cheap. The server may not have to be that expensive, as it is only about 2 to 10 emails per second (approx. 2 per million), which is not that outrageous. Disk space is cheap these days and he can delete a lot of stuff coming in pretty fast.

    However, that bandwidth is costing him money. A fair amount of it too. Hard to say, since he is in Seattle. I would think a couple hundred bucks a month all day long if not more.

    So if he is spending that kind of money to keep it, it must be making him money. That's just my opinion....

  4. How about nospam.com? by billsf · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually that one is taken and its DNS is: {ns1/ns2.anything.com}. I fully agree these are overly generic (both of the past domains qualify) and should be 'reserved' for nobody, and that isn't {nobody.com}... It all depends on who runs the TLD. Some are more permissive than others. Playing 'by the book', '.com' probably allows some very tacky names -- Its a 'generic domain'. A geographic TLD would take quite some care to avoid misuse. Clearly, names of government agencies are to be avoided, but does '.com'? I don't think any individual would ever get, {fbi.us} or, heaven forbid, {irs.us} or here, {avid.nl} or anything with 'belasting' in it, unless you really are the 'tax people'.

    At first I thought all this (domain hacks) was quite funny. However, it is unfortunate so many see the net as one big crime spree.

  5. Re:I did this once. by kju · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had a similar experience. A mobile phone operator (now defunct) allowed its customers to get mailadresses under their domain. So i got postmaster@domain which was accepted happily by the system. I deleted the alias a few days later though, because the amount of mail really got out of hand. I heard from another sysadmin who using the forged name "Andreas Buse" registered the mailadress abuse@... with his provider. :-)

  6. Re:you can own the headline domain by Teflon_Jeff · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Kicks and giggles. I thought it would be funny to have an @donotreply.com e-mail address. had I known about all the crap that would filter through, I probably would have sold it.

    --
    "Teach a man to build a fire, and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life."
  7. The guy has a gold mine, this is illegal... by msauve · · Score: 3, Interesting

    think about it - the CAN SPAM act makes it a felony for commercial enterprises to "materially falsifi[y] header information," which is EXACTLY what the bozos who cause this problem are doing.

    If I owned the domain, I'd be contacting every commercial enterprise who's email got bounced to me, and letting them know that for a nominal fee, they could avoid my getting the feds to take notice of their illegal activities.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  8. Foo@bar.com has been my secretary by OMNIpotusCOM · · Score: 3, Interesting

    for years and he never complains. I liked the Wikileaks idea though.