[102972] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Customer-facing ACLs
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Ang Kah Yik)
Mon Mar 10 20:41:18 2008
Date: Tue, 11 Mar 2008 08:40:16 +0800
From: Ang Kah Yik <mailinglist@bangky.net>
To: Andy Dills <andy@xecu.net>
CC: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <20080310200934.F76629@shell.xecu.net>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu
Hi Andy (and all who responded),
Thanks for the heads-up on the redirection on SMTP traffic. I've yet to
see an implementation of it but I agree that it's a possible solution.
As for the issue I raised previously, perhaps corporate users isn't a
good example but what about users of email services such as Gmail and
the like?
Some users do use the SMTP service instead of the web interface. But
redirection should do the trick.
And thanks to all who remind me about rfc 2476 - I'm not a mail admin so
I'm not familiar with it but I'll read up on it.
Andy Dills wrote:
> And wouldn't those corporate types require VPN to access the network?
>
> On top of that, most who "block" 25 don't block it but direct it to
> internal mail servers where it can be subjected to limits and filtering.
>
> Andy
>
> ---
> Andy Dills
> Xecunet, Inc.
> www.xecu.net
> 301-682-9972
> ---
>
> For what it's worth, that's what port 587 was created for.