AOL lifts demon spam ban


Recommended Posts

AOL lifted a block on email from ISP Demon this afternoon, after a sudden surge of spam messages provoked AOL into rejecting all email from Demon users last Friday.

In a notice to its users on Friday, Demon admitted that its users were unable to send email to a "small number of other ISPs" because of measures introduced after spammers used open mail relays within its network to send bulk email. No-one for Demon was available for comment this afternoon, so we not sure which ISPs other than AOL were involved.

Demon (probably correctly) attributed the problem to misconfiguration of its customers' machines, a point to which we'll return presently.

AOL has an in-house automated system which blocks emails from individual IP ranges or in some cases, an entire ISP, if these are identified as the source of a spam onslaught, a company spokesman told us.Spam last week from Demon reached such levels that the AOL introduced a temporary block to stem the deluge.

AOL has now restored connectivity to Demon.

While the root cause of the problem is insecure configuration by its users, Demon has an obligation both to educate its customers on the problem and to actively scan its network for open mail relays before the problem gets out of hand.

Last week Demon seemingly failed to get on top of the issue, surprising given its reputation as an ISP which takes security seriously. But, then again, there were indications that Demon had something of a spam problem as long ago as last June.

:view: Full Story: the reg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.