SORBS Blocklist Reportedly Sold For $451K
palegray.net writes "SORBS, a well-known email blocklist provider, has reportedly been sold for $451k. Early reports indicate an acquisition by GFI, a company specializing in various communications services. In recent years, SORBS has been the target of frequent accusations of mismanagement and poor conduct, leading many to wonder if this turn in events might signal a chance for improved behavior. Citing lack of ISP support, the blocklist released statements earlier this year that they would be shuttering their operation."
Honestly, that wouldn't make me wonder if SORBS will improve its behavior after an acquisition. No. That would have made me find another blocklist provider a long time ago. Shady/questionable behavior like that goes on only because it's so thoroughly tolerated and often actively supported.
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
It is unfortunate that SORBS has gotten a bad rap. Although it has been plagued on the administrative side of things, its list was still helpful in detecting and removing spam.
GFI is a good company - but I am betting the list will no longer be free to use. Everything they sell is licenced on a "per mailbox" structure, and as such I imagine the list will be implemented into their anti-spam products. There may also be a nominal fee (per box) to use the list with other spam filters.
blocklists should be one-way hashes. the user's email address should never even be sent over the wire.
Right before signing, you should have said, you know what, let's make it $419k. You guys just never miss an opportunity do you.
That is one hell of a donation. :) I sure hope they fix the removal process. I have been struggling for weeks now to get some netblocks removed.
I can't tell if this is a typo or an actual term someone might use. I suppose shuttering the operation would simply mean concealing it from the public?
Hope that the "shutdown" means that answer everything as NOT blacklisted for the people/devices that surelly will still use them for a while (not sure how will be interpreted to not be able to connect to the service), not the opposite that happened with others blacklists in the past.
The blacklist itself? The many thousands of IP addresses they have identified as (a lot incorrectly btw) as deliverers of spam?
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So, will they go the traditional route and block /0 when they shut down?
I don't know of ANY serious ISP that pays any attention to SORBS and it's been that way for a few years. Whoever cashed that $451k check had better squirrel that money away quickly before the unwitting buyer tries to claw it back.
I was one of the people that had a very bad experience with SORBS.
My company got a new ISP with an external block. I'm sure at some point that block had been used as a dynamic range. I had not set a PTR record (because the IP of the mail server changed at the last second), my PTR and A record for that mail server were not set to 12 hours (seriously, who does that?), and I was banned on the SORBS list. I had an SPF record, you could obviously see that I'm part of a legitimate organization, and it would have taken maybe 2 minutes of work for an physical admin to realize that this was a mistake.
It took two support tickets with SORBS, 5 calls to my ISP, and around 10 days to get off the list. In the meantime, we could not contact certain people using it. And what's worse is that the only solution that the admin of SORBS had was to get everyone to stop using the SORBS list. I think that the TTL requirements are the worst part of their solution.
In my opinion, an unattended, automated black list is worse than the problem of too much spam. You are blocking valid mails, and because you are blocking it at the IP level, the end user doesn't even see it show up in their spam bucket many times. If SORBS had a single admin, checking their email once a day, they could easily filter out some of these issues.
I encouraged several anti-spam vendors to stop using their services for this reason, through the different companies that we interact with. There are several other blacklists that do their job well, there is no need to use an unattended blacklist.
Gonzo Granzeau
"Nothing the god of biomechanics wouldn't let you into heaven for.." -Roy Batty
It's unfortunate that SORBS deserved the bad rap they got, but they were quite effective at false-positive mis-detection of legitimate emails as spam, unlike lists such as Spamhaus, and quite unwilling to remove addresses that had been tagged as spam or as part of variously large blocks of ISPs that had had some spammers use them.
There are legitimate uses for a rabid-overkill list, such as directing mail from those IP addresses to a check-more-carefully server if you've got a multi-tier multi-server spam-blocking environment anyway, or perhaps adding a bit of weight to your Spamassassin weights, but they weren't a list you could depend on if you wanted to actually receive all your non-spam mail.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Spam? Flamers? Email?
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I hope they bought it to deep six it. There is just no use for it other than to let it die. Course thats expensive but could be a huge chunk of advertising dollars. ;)
I'd stopped using SORBS awhile back, after numerous instances of it flagging real email as spam. Since then, the amount of UCE that I've been receiving since has actually *gone down*. Go figure.
The servers, software, database, "reputation", etc. Basically, an anti-spam operation on wheels. ('tho I don't recommend rolling fully loaded racks around. A fully loaded 43U rack can weigh nearly a ton.)
Not me. There are far better ones out there.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I've had to deal with GFI on many Windows Servers. Their products are way overkill for a small businesses. I've also seen it lock up SMTP services now and then. I have yet to see any other 3rd party application do that (I'm sure there out there though). Sucks.
If the mail server is naked, I'll at least get IMF up and running back to Spamhaus. Not perfect by a long shot, but at least it filters out anything on their RBL list.
Life is not for the lazy.
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