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Re: remailer spam throttle



Sergey Goldgaber <[email protected]> writes:
> -> Right now, there's a very large number of addresses in the key servers.
> -> Instantly making them into a list of addresses that accept anon mail
> -> will make it hard (hopefully infeasible) for the LEAs to investigate
> -> everyone willing to accept anon e-mail as a suspect in sending it.
>
> Unfortunately, key servers can not be trusted.  I'm sure you're aware that
> anyone can submit a key, and thus forgeries abound.
>
> If the above model is adopted, key servers will be the first target of
> the prospective spammer.

Why Sergey, you mean to tell me that there are key servers out there that
accept a key from a purported address and don't send back a cookie to that
address to see if it's not fake? :-) That's just terrible. Definitely no
key coming from such a server should be trusted. :-) :-)

Today is March 29, 1997 - almost April 1st. The Internet ain't what is
used to was 15 or 10 or even 2 years ago. If you get an e-mail that
purports to be from X, and it requests that you add X's public key
to your key server, or (un)subscribe X to a mailing list, or
block X from receiving anonymous e-mail - it may be a forgery.
Never act on such requests without trying to authenticate them
with a cookie.

---

<a href="mailto:[email protected]">Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM</a>
Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps