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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: while i'm on the subject of filtering, here's today's list of spammers
> > No, it isn't. You have guests and other users. If you have IP customers, > > then they have guests and other online users. By accepting spam you allow > > your resources (which you offer for cooperative reasons) to be used in a > > noncooperative way. If you have downstream customers you are subjecting > > them to the same abuse. > > We offer our customers Internet access, and when they complain about > spammers we do something about it. However, what we do affects only our > network and our customers. It does not affect the world as a whole? why does everyone keep insinuating that paul is blocking root level name service from the whole world? that's essentially the argument and it's completely off base. i can admit that *maybe* it's not even reasonable (even after my last post) to block *any* entity from reaching a single root name server but this is turning into a tar and feathering of paul for "affecting the world as a whole" which is way out of proportion. > > connections. > > Again, you can't block everyone. Why you feel it necessary to impose your > social mores on the net as a whole is beyond me. sigh. when has he imposed his social mores on anyone here? paul blackholes spam sites *within* his own network which he pays for. he happens to run a public root name server (one of many) and the spam sites are denied access to part of the public resource (root name service). you can *actively* (as opposed to passively or without your permission) take this list of networks from paul via a bgp peering session and block access from spammers within your own network. so where in that scenario is paul forcing morals on anyone? or blocking the "whole world" from reaching a root name server in his network? -brett - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
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