Amazon's EC2 Having Problems With Spam and Malware
jamie pointed out a story about the recent problems Amazon's EC2 service has been having with malware and spam. "EC2 space is now actively blocked by Outblaze, and has been listed by Spamhaus in their PBL list [...] However as Seth Breidbart noted in the comments, 'note that Amazon will terminate the instance. That means that the spammer just creates another instance, which gets a new IP address, and continues spamming.' True enough -- as described, instance termination simply isn't good enough."
While I'm against the death penalty, I might be willing to consider it for spammers.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
They have the credit card numbers of these people, no? Add a $1000 (or more) charge to the TOS each time someone gets caught spamming through them. That should make a pretty clear point.
Why aren't Amazon terminating the accounts of offenders, and blacklisting whatever payment method they're using? It's a paid service, it's not like spammers can register for new accounts as much as they like, they're going to run out of credit card numbers (well, assuming their activities aren't more nefarious than mere spam).
It's not in Amazon's interests to have EC2 blacklisted.
Somebody finally solved the ????? = Profit equation. What's everyone getting so worked up about?
Everybody's a libertarian 'till their neighbour's becomes a crack house.
The top hit from Google would have told you. It's Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud.
My thoughts exactly. Luckily, Brian Krebs at the Washington Post wrote about this in his Security Fix blog.
Slightly disreputable, albeit gregarious
Wikipedia says it's the north eastern corner of the city of London, roughly. I don't get the article, either.
Stasis is death. Embrace change.
Ah, the PBL. That's where your argument falls to pieces.
From http://www.spamhaus.org/pbl/index.lasso :
PBL IP address ranges are added and maintained by each network participating in the PBL project, working in conjunction with the Spamhaus PBL team, to help apply their outbound email policies.
So, your ISP told Spamhaus that mail shouldn't be coming from the range your IP address is in. Not Spamhaus making a trite, petty and vindictive block for the fun of it. Not some blacklist deciding in error to block a whole /24 full of static addresses with REAL rDNS records for most of it because they found a couple of zombied machines with vaguely generic-looking PTRs in it. This is a case of the people you pay for connectivity telling Spamhaus that the rest of the world should not accept mail from your IP address or others near it until further notice - they're being good neighbours, and are to be applauded.
If you have a static address you can poke a hole in the PBL for it pretty easily - *you* can provide that further notice:
A feature of the PBL is the elimination of 'false positives' with a server-identifying and automatic removal mechanism for single IP addresses. This allows end users with static IP addresses within a larger dynamic pool, and legitimate mail server operators, to assert that in their opinion their IP addresses are a trustworthy source of email and to automatically remove (suppress) their IP addresses from the PBL database. Safeguards are built in to prevent abuse of this facility by spammers (and particularly by automated bots).
Do your research. The PBL is pretty damn useful, and you probably qualify for free use. If you have an unfiltered postmaster address on your domain (you do, don't you?) the smart thing would be to start blocking with it but make sure the rejection contains something like "Rejected: $IP_ADDRESS listed in Spamhaus PBL ( http://lookup-urlip_address/ ) - please contact postmaster@whineyblacklisthater.org for assistance if required" - you'll find that the "false-positives" for it are almost invariably from people who don't know what the PBL is and want to do their own thing, regardless of the practicalities the rest of the world has to face. Why should I or anyone else accept mail from somewhere your own ISP or their upstream provider has said I shouldn't?