Survival Tips for Yahoo's New Anti-Spam Policies? 18
skagin asks: "Yahoo has instituted a new set of anti-spam policies which are causing havoc for our customers (we're a small ISP). List mail with non-existant, over-quota, or recently cancelled recipients is being bounced whole, and much of the one-to-one mail we send is bouncing. Yahoo tells us that our mailserver is being treated as suspicious because of the number of bad recipients being sent to, but most of those are bounces from yahoo spam sent to non-existant addresses on our network. Our customers are going nuts. Is anyone else out there having this problem with Yahoo?"
just deal with the situation... (Score:1)
-Wade
Re:just deal with the situation... (Score:1)
My
possible solution? (Score:3, Interesting)
Even better, don't just drop them, collect them and drop the collection of yahoo-originated spam on their desk;
"It's your friggin mess, you clean it up..."
all else fails, inform all your users with a nicely worded e-mail along with some e-mail address for the appropriate people who they can complain/rant to at (uselessbastards@yahoo.com)
Ask them to forward this to any of their user@yahoo.com associates and put the pressure on from both sides. Good luck and let us know how things turn out.
That might explain (Score:2)
Postfix Bounce Log included:
The Postfix program
: host mail.san.yahoo.com[209.132.1.30] said: 550
RCPT TO: Relaying not allowed
[ Part 2: "Delivery error report" ]
Reporting-MTA: dns; majere.epithna.com
Arrival-Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 14:48:45 -0500 (EST)
Final-Recipient: rfc822; brianb23@mystictavern.com
Action: failed
Status: 5.0.0
Diagnostic-Code: X-Postfix; host mail.san.yahoo.com[209.132.1.30] said: 550
RCPT TO: Relaying not allowed
[ Part 3: "Undelivered Message" ]
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2002 14:48:45 -0500 (EST)
From: xxxxxxxxx
To: Brian and Angi Berkovitz
Subject: Re: friday
Re:That might explain (Score:3, Interesting)
Yahoo accounts--filter the trailer (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yahoo accounts--filter the trailer (Score:1)
Cut them off! (Score:2)
After trying to resolve it directly with them and failing. I simply blacklisted hotmail, the amount of time saved from less junk email vastly over shadowed the time required to explain that we 'no longer supported hotmail because of all the junk email they send. 'You can hear my customers sagely nodding to themselves, praising my iniative, and vowing to tell there friends to move from hotmail."
Yahoo Mail -- Silent Edits (Score:4, Interesting)
As an anti-virus measure, Yahoo Mail filters all HTML attachments to disable malicious Javascript applets. What's wrong with that? The filtering is very simplistic. There's no attempt to identfy and remove scripts as such. They just do a global search for intrusive Javascript constructs ("eval") and replace them with benign ones ("review"). They don't even check for word boundaries! So if you get a newsletter called "Medieval History" it will come through as "Medireview History".
The potential for garbled communication is mind-boggling. To make matters worse, they don't warn people that they do this.
Re:Yahoo Mail -- Silent Edits (Score:2)
Yahoo does not filter plaintext. I just tested it.
I cannot believe dumbass moderators modded you up without even looking at what you said.
Re:Yahoo Mail -- Silent Edits (Score:2)
Read my post again. I did not say "plain text".