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Comment Re:Not much to do (Score 1) 459

Really? From TFA: "We are singling out spammers on our network and blocking port 25," said Mitch Bowling, Comcast's vice president of operations. "We don't think it's the right approach to blanket port 25. The right approach is to seek out people who are spamming our network and others." ...so, any spammers they find, instead of terminating the account they block port 25. Of course everyone else they don't 'find' can still spam away...

Comment Re:Not much to do (Score 2) 459

If you aren't able to get a proper reverse DNS entry for your public outbound mail server then you probably shouldn't be running one. If you have a real static IP (as opposed to "my IP doesn't seem to change") - then it shouldn't be a problem getting the DNS setup correctly.

To answer the original question about "what should you do", the answer is simple - if the ISP won't issue a PTR record because of the type of connection being used then the customer should smart-host their mail through the ISP mail servers to ensure global reachability. As you say, often the edge device is a swiss-army knife and in many cases the admin isn't competent enough to properly secure/maintain it. This is exactly what blocking outbound SMTP from dynamic space is meant to accomplish and I'm pleasantly surprised to hear that Comcast/Verizon have finally started to implement what every other responsible ISP has been doing for a decade.

Comment Re:While I sorta agree with what the guy is saying (Score 1) 229

To play devil's advocate using your example it'd be the same as selling "child poison" and saying there are plenty of other things you could do with it. :) I don't disagree with you that tools can be abused for non-intended purposes, but this software is being promoted for its intended purpose. The fix is stronger security protocols of course, but I couldn't resist the analogy - sorry.

Google

Submission + - Google's new lobbying power in Washington

*SECADM writes: Learning from Microsoft's error, Google is builds a lobbying power house in Washington. "... Two years ago, Google was on the verge of making that Microsoft-like error. Davidson, then a 37-year-old former deputy director of the Center for Democracy & Technology, was the search-engine company's sole staff lobbyist in Washington. As recently as last year, Google co-founder Sergey Brin had trouble getting meetings with members of Congress. To change that, Google went on a hiring spree and now has 12 lobbyists and lobbying-related professionals on staff here — more than double the size of the standard corporate lobbying office — and is continuing to add people."

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