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Spam project pulls plug

Open-relay volunteer monitors hang it up

December 21, 2006 12:00 PM ET

TechWorld.com - The antispam blacklist service The Open Relay Database (ORDB) has pulled the plug after five and a half years because of spammers' growing sophistication.

The ORDB was designed to deal with a technique in which spammers used SMTP proxy servers to flood the Internet with junk e-mail. The project distributed a blacklist of mail servers that allowed third-party -- or "open" -- relays and were thus liable to be used by spammers.

But the list had leveled off at around 225,000 over the past year, and updates had slowed to a crawl, according to the volunteer-run project. "It's been a case of a long goodbye, as very little work has gone into maintaining ORDB for a while," organizers said in a message this week on the project's Web site. "The general consensus within the team is that open relay RBLs [Real-time Blackhole Lists] are no longer the most effective way of preventing spam from entering your network."

The ORDB is essentially a victim of its own success. Five years ago, around 90% of spam was sent through open relays, and now the figure is less than 1%, as a result of blocking lists and Internet service providers disallowing third-party relay.

While the shift has stopped one type of spam distribution, it has also caused inconvenience for users, who were once able to use open relays to, for example, connect to mail servers from different locations. Spammers haven't been deterred and generally now rely on botnets, networks of compromised PCs, to send spam.

The project said users should remove ORDB checks from mailers immediately. As a replacement, the project recommended a combination of graylisting and content-based analysis, such as dspam, bmf or Spam Assassin.


Reprinted with permission from

For more enterprise technology news from the U.K., please visit TechWorld.com. Copyright 2006 IDG, all rights reserved.

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