A terminating comment has been added to all SURBL zone files. It has the form:
; End of file: $timestamp
where $timestamp is Unix epoch seconds and matches the zone file
serial number. This can be used to automatically detect truncated
files. If the terminating comment is not present, the
file is truncated.
Notes:
0. This would only affect those using rsynced zone files, and for them
it should have generally no impact as long as comments are correctly
detected. The semicolon comment character is standard for BIND and
rbldnsd, but may not be for other applications. This change would not
affect users of DNS queries via the SURBL public nameservers in any
way.
1. The syntax is minorly different from some other blacklist zonefiles
with similar comments in that there is a space between the comment
character and the text.
2. The only zone that should be used in any production applications is
multi.surbl.org. The others are obsolete since they're all included
in multi, and they may go away eventually.
3. SURBL still needs help with public DNS. Please see:
http://www.surbl.org/public-dns.html and contact us at rsync at our
domain if you can help.
MxScan is an anti-spam and anti-virus plugin for the MailEnable
Windows mail server. It supports SURBLs via SpamAssassin, uses
ClamAV, etc.
http://www.mxuptime.com
We'd like to welcome the addition of a new SURBL public name
server g1.surbl.org hosted by:
EnderUNIX SDT
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!
We'd like to welcome the addition of a new SURBL public name
server j2.surbl.org hosted by:
EnderUNIX SDT
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!
We'd like to welcome the addition of a new SURBL public name
server j1.surbl.org hosted by:
Frontier Communications
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!
We'd like to welcome the addition of new SURBL public name
servers m5.surbl.org and n5.surbl.org hosted by:
Integrity Network Solutions
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!
We'd like to welcome the addition of a new SURBL public name
server b5.surbl.org hosted by:
Webmind.be
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!
P.S. We could still use some more public nameservers, especially at
large ISPs, large datacenters, etc. Please contact us if you can help
the SURBL community in this way. More information is at:
http://www.surbl.org/public-dns.html
We are pleased to announce that the SURBL phishing list now includes
data from malware.com.br:
http://www.surbl.org/lists.html#ph
This well-known and widely-used "Malware Block List" includes public
submission methods, but please use them only to report malware sites:
http://www.malware.com.br/
Thanks to Malware Block List for allowing us to include their data.
We'd like to welcome the addition of a new SURBL public name
server i5.surbl.org hosted by:
Rambler
The SURBL community thanks all the hosts and administrators of
the public name servers for their ongoing help and support!