The Real Cause of SPAM - Open SMTP Relays
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Real Cause of SPAM - Open SMTP Relays
By Stephen Bucaro
Email is transported across the Internet via Simple Mail
Transfer Protocol (SMTP). SMTP relays email from server to
server in route to your mailbox. When email arrives at your
ISP's server, it is stored there until you download it via Post
Office Protocol (POP3).
Smart businesses relay email only between SMTP servers within
their company's domain. Email from outside the domain can be
deposited in your mailbox. But email from outside the domain,
that is not addressed to a mailbox within the domain, is bounced
back to the originating domain with a Nondelivery Receipt (NDR).
Unfortunately, there are many incompetent system administrators
that have configured their SMTP servers to relay email for
everyone, not just those in the local domain. Spammers use these
open relays on the Internet to send millions of unsolicited
messages.
Stopping SPAM is not difficult. If every system administrator
configured their SMTP servers routing restrictions to not relay
email for everyone, spammers would not be able to steal server
resources that we all pay for. These inept system administrators
should learn how to specify which domains they will allow to
relay messages through their servers.
They should not relay messages that originated from open relay
SMTP servers. There are several services that maintain lists of
open relays on the Internet.
Www.ordb.org Open Relay Database www.mail-abuse.org Mail Abuse
Prevention System http://relays.osirusoft.com Osirusoft
Osirusoft has a link that enables you to test your email server
to see if it is open relay.
An administrator can configure their SMTP servers to check one
of these lists and reject messages from domains on the list.
They should also configure their SMTP servers to accept messages
only from connections that authenticate first. Authentication
requires the originating server to provide a security
certificate which verifies the servers identity.
SPAM can be eradicated today if the incompetent system
administrators that have their SMTP servers configured as open
relays would learn how to specify which domains they will allow
to relay messages through their servers. They should not be
relaying messages that originated from servers on the open relay
list. ----------------------------------------------------------
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