This is from a US Bank newsletter, and I have confirmed via whois that US
Bank does own the domain in question:
usbank-email.MUNGEDcom
The sending IP address is not listed in any RBL/RHSBLs:
http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/ip4r.ch?ip=192.168.40.122
Looks like a legitimate, subscription based, US Bank newsletter.
Bill
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Chris Santerre [mailto:csanterre@merchantsoverseas.com]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 12:06 PM
>To: 'SURBL Discussion list'
>Subject: RE: [SURBL-Discuss] WS & DS FP?
>
>
>
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Bill Landry [mailto:billl@pointshare.com]
>>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 11:39 AM
>>To: 'SURBL Discussion list'
>>Subject: Re: [SURBL-Discuss] WS & DS FP?
>>
>>
>>----- Original Message -----
>>From: "Chris Santerre" <csanterre(a)merchantsoverseas.com>
>>
>>> I agree. But the legit companies were spamming. That was
>>what I was trying
>>> to say, although poorly :) Some of the NANAS posts have
>>legit companies in
>>> them, but are spam. Most likely they paid a company to
>>market them. Or
>>they
>>> tried there hand at doing it themselves and purchased a
>>list. This looks
>>> like the main focus of yesmail/clickaction. A mass email marketing
>>company.
>>> SO they will get legit companies to pay them to
>>advertise/spam for them.
>>>
>>> They are a spammer for hier. I don't see them in ANY legit
>>mail other then
>>> this one single run with itworld. And that is because of a
>>seminar on how
>>to
>>> use email for mass marketing! I may get overruled on this
>>one, but I'm
>>> sticking to my guns that they are spammers.
>>
>>The IT World newsletter link to clickaction had nothing to do
>>with a mass
>>marketing seminar. If you review my original post again, you
>>will see that
>>it was used for a very legitimate purpose, to allow users that
>>have problems
>>viewing their IT World newsletter subscription in HTML format
>>to be able to
>>change it to a text based format - that was it, pure and simple.
>>
>>There are lots of other ways to block clickaction if people
>>feel that that
>>is necessary, however, since there are obviously very
>>legitimate uses for
>>clickaction services by very legitimate companies, I do not feel that
>>listing them in any of the SURBL is appropriate. My vote is
>>to keep them
>>whitelisted for now.
>>
>
>So once again, a spammer gets 1-2 legit companies to use them,
>and they get
>removed from all RBLs? If that is how we are going to operate,
>we might as
>well shutdown now. Game over.
>
>"obviously very legitimate uses for clickaction services"
>
>SO itworld wanted to reduce there own traffic and have this
>legit bulk done
>by a "Legit commercial email marketer". Well they picked the
>wrong one. This
>isn't the first time we have seen this and it won't be the last.
>
>The PROPER thing to do is inform itworld of the history of the
>marketer they
>are dealing with.
>
>Whitelist? No way in hell. Temp remove, sure go ahead, but
>they are just
>going to get submitted again. Then what? Why not local
>whitelist then for
>your site?
>
>I'm starting to sound like the crazy SPAM-L locals :) BUt I'm tired of
>having this one single argument every week. Spammer who gets legit
>businesses to sign up....we need to deal with this now.
>Otherwise, like I
>said, game over.
>
>--Chris (Antispam nut!)
More info:
http://www.badads.org/january02.shtml
They have been providing email support for itworld since 2001! Maybe itworld
needs a clue!
http://emailuniverse.com/list-news/?id=298
--Chris (Still digging.)
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David Hooton [mailto:david.hooton@gmail.com]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 10:42 AM
>To: SURBL Discussion list
>Subject: Re: [SURBL-Discuss] WS & DS FP?
>
>
>On Tue, 24 Aug 2004 10:16:39 -0400, Chris Santerre
><csanterre(a)merchantsoverseas.com> wrote:
>> I agree. But the legit companies were spamming. That was
>what I was trying
>> to say, although poorly :) Some of the NANAS posts have
>legit companies in
>> them, but are spam. Most likely they paid a company to
>market them. Or they
>> tried there hand at doing it themselves and purchased a
>list. This looks
>> like the main focus of yesmail/clickaction. A mass email
>marketing company.
>> SO they will get legit companies to pay them to
>advertise/spam for them.
>>
>> They are a spammer for hier. I don't see them in ANY legit
>mail other then
>> this one single run with itworld. And that is because of a
>seminar on how to
>> use email for mass marketing! I may get overruled on this
>one, but I'm
>> sticking to my guns that they are spammers.
>
>I'm with Chris, string them up!
>
>How about a slightly more moderate approach, lets not whitelist them,
>but lets remove them from the list for now. If they re-offend then we
>list them until such time as they prove themselves as whitehat.
>
>This kind of domain is a very slippery one, it incredibly hard to put
>them on either side of the FP fence.
>--
>Regards,
>
>David Hooton
Oh it gets even better according to our friend. Related domains!
abii.combusinesscreditusa.combusinessusa.comclickaction.comdatabaseamerica.comdblink.comdirectoriesusa.comdonnelleymarketing.comeasymailers.orgemailmarketing.comenterconnect.netinfousa.cominfousadomain.cominfousagov.cominfousaproductsupport.cominsync-palm.comlibraryusa.comlistbazaar.commysalesconnection.commyyesmail.comnewleadsusa.comnomail.comp01.comp02.comp03.comp04.compondmail.compostdirect.comsalesgenie.net
salesleadsusa.biz
salesleadsusa.comyesmail-inc.comyesmail.comyesmail.netyesmail.orgym0.comym0.netymc0.comymc0.net
So what do you think of them now?
--Chris
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jeff Chan [mailto:jeffc@surbl.org]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 9:48 AM
>To: SURBL Discuss
>Subject: Re: [SURBL-Discuss] WS & DS FP?
>
>
>On Tuesday, August 24, 2004, 6:46:01 AM, Chris Santerre wrote:
>> Sorry I just noticed yesmail.com is listed is SURBL. So
>clickaction.net
>> should be as well. They are one in the same.
>
>Listings should not necessarily be associative. The real test
>remains as "how spammy are they?" Do these guys do anything
>legitimate? The NANAS customers of clickaction looked pretty
>legitimate to me, assuming they're really customers.
>
>Jeff C.
>
I agree. But the legit companies were spamming. That was what I was trying
to say, although poorly :) Some of the NANAS posts have legit companies in
them, but are spam. Most likely they paid a company to market them. Or they
tried there hand at doing it themselves and purchased a list. This looks
like the main focus of yesmail/clickaction. A mass email marketing company.
SO they will get legit companies to pay them to advertise/spam for them.
They are a spammer for hier. I don't see them in ANY legit mail other then
this one single run with itworld. And that is because of a seminar on how to
use email for mass marketing! I may get overruled on this one, but I'm
sticking to my guns that they are spammers.
--Chris
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Raymond Dijkxhoorn [mailto:raymond@prolocation.net]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 9:39 AM
>To: SURBL Discussion list
>Subject: RE: [SURBL-Discuss] Improved name server status page
>
>
>Hi!
>
>> >Currently I have the DNS timeout set to 10 seconds with two
>> >retries. What kind of values are more typical or standard
>> >for resolvers?
>
>> >I will use the scripts that generate the page to send
>> >notifications (probably to myself at first) once things
>> >stabilize. Since events don't happen very often, it's
>> >probably not necessary to show a history on the page.
>
>> That is very cool! However do you think it is wise to make
>public the IP's
>> of the servers?
>
><BOFH mode=on>
>
>No, indeed, lets hide them, it will only cause problems if we
>list them ;)
>
><BOFH mode=off>
>
>Chris, you paranoid DONKEY :) how do you think people should
>lookup the
>zones if we dont publish where to get them. DNS does the exact
>same thing.
>
>; <<>> DiG 9.2.1 <<>> ns surbl.org
>;; global options: printcmd
>;; Got answer:
>;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 21524
>;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 12, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 12
>
>;; QUESTION SECTION:
>;surbl.org. IN NS
>
>;; ANSWER SECTION:
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns9.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns8.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns7.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns6.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns5.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns3.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns2.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns13.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns12.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns11.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns10.surbl.org.
>surbl.org. 13466 IN NS ns1.surbl.org.
>
>;; ADDITIONAL SECTION:
>ns9.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 209.234.97.11
>ns8.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 66.59.111.182
>ns7.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 130.161.128.84
>ns6.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 128.255.17.20
>ns5.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 128.255.17.19
>ns3.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 139.130.4.5
>ns2.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 209.204.159.15
>ns13.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 66.170.2.60
>ns12.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 66.170.2.50
>ns11.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 64.21.208.212
>ns10.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 66.251.133.4
>ns1.surbl.org. 14175 IN A 208.201.249.238
>
LOL, yeah I realise that, but let the spammers do that. Why make it easy for
them. Most can't spell DNS. :) The more hoops they have to go thru the
better. I'm sure we may see a DDOS attempt by first quarter next year.
--Chris
Almost perfect. You have to follow RFC standards and name them either star
wars or Simpsons Characters. Not ns1, ns2, ......
:)
--Chris
>-----Original Message-----
>From: William C. Devine II [mailto:william@devine.net]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 10:00 AM
>To: Jeff Chan; SURBL Discussion list
>Subject: RE: [SURBL-Discuss] Improved name server status page
>
>
>You could keep a generic list of nameservers such as 'Server
>1', 'Server
>2', etc, which correlates to 'ns1', 'ns2', etc. It'd just add a level
>of obscurity and require just a little more of a monkey to figure out
>though.
>
>william
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jeff Chan [mailto:jeffc@surbl.org]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 6:40 AM
>To: SURBL Discuss
>Subject: Re: [SURBL-Discuss] Improved name server status page
>
>
>On Tuesday, August 24, 2004, 6:32:44 AM, Chris Santerre wrote:
>> That is very cool! However do you think it is wise to make public the
>IP's
>> of the servers?
>
>Yeah that kind of raised some flags for me too, but the servers
>are easy enough to find, and the names of the servers are not
>unique due to the round robin.
>
>For example e.surbl.org resolves to two different name servers.
>
>So the only thing unique and used for the subdomains are their
>IP addresses. I suppose we could set up another set of aliases
>for them, but kind of don't want another set to maintain.
>(The old style ns1, ns2, etc. names remain but for BIND
>type servers for the parent zone. They have already diverged
>from the rbldnsd servers.)
>
>Jeff C.
>
>_______________________________________________
>Discuss mailing list
>Discuss(a)lists.surbl.org
>http://lists.surbl.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
>_______________________________________________
>Discuss mailing list
>Discuss(a)lists.surbl.org
>http://lists.surbl.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: David B Funk [mailto:dbfunk@engineering.uiowa.edu]
>Sent: Monday, August 23, 2004 11:15 PM
>To: 'SURBL Discussion list'
>Subject: [SURBL-Discuss] Phish via "previewmysite.com"
>
>
>Found a citibank phish that used a redirect thru go.msn.com to
>'zach.com.previewmysite.com' (see attached message).
>
>Is previewmysite.com guilty or an innocent open site that is being
>exploited?
My eyes! They see nothing! Help!!!!!!
I think you forgot to attach it!
Without even seeing it, I think they are being exploited, and they may need
to start using SURBL to check their users.
--Chris
You could keep a generic list of nameservers such as 'Server 1', 'Server
2', etc, which correlates to 'ns1', 'ns2', etc. It'd just add a level
of obscurity and require just a little more of a monkey to figure out
though.
william
-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff Chan [mailto:jeffc@surbl.org]
Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 6:40 AM
To: SURBL Discuss
Subject: Re: [SURBL-Discuss] Improved name server status page
On Tuesday, August 24, 2004, 6:32:44 AM, Chris Santerre wrote:
> That is very cool! However do you think it is wise to make public the
IP's
> of the servers?
Yeah that kind of raised some flags for me too, but the servers
are easy enough to find, and the names of the servers are not
unique due to the round robin.
For example e.surbl.org resolves to two different name servers.
So the only thing unique and used for the subdomains are their
IP addresses. I suppose we could set up another set of aliases
for them, but kind of don't want another set to maintain.
(The old style ns1, ns2, etc. names remain but for BIND
type servers for the parent zone. They have already diverged
from the rbldnsd servers.)
Jeff C.
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Discuss mailing list
Discuss(a)lists.surbl.org
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