robscullion Premium join:2001-12-07 Philadelphia, PA
·Callcentric
·Comcast Digital Vo..
·Comcast
·Speakeasy
| Re: Public pressure works against prominent compan Just for the sake of argument, I think you'd have to also block any direct outbound DNS queries from the zombies (client PCs) to outside DNS servers in order to make this at all feasible. Otherwise, the zombies could just skip the local DNS server and do an end-run around the whole system by querying the remote DNS servers directly.
But isn't the point here that the referenced spam software is sending via the zombie ISP's SMTP server? In that case, there's no MX DNS query involved. I don't even see how you can really differentiate the zombie software from the legitimate user. The zombie just sends to the ISPs SMTP server and that server takes care of all the forwarding for it.
Maybe if all ISPs forced authentication for sending even from within their own network it would put a dent in Send Safe type systems. Does this Send Safe stuff steal auth info from the user's local legit email software? If so, I guess that'd be a dead end as well. Otherwise, going to a system that requires authentication over a secure channel for sending email might at least curb the effectiveness of this particular method. |