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Shutting Down the Highway to Internet Hell
Yahoo News / Ziff Davis: News ^ | 10 April 2005 | Larry Seltzer

Posted on 04/11/2005 10:12:57 AM PDT by ShadowAce

Do you run a mail server on your home Internet account? If you do, it's probably without your knowledge, such as in a mail worm or a zombie spambot. Few if any people running these programs intend to do so, and it's time for ISPs to close the door through which they operate.

I think there's a consensus developing among anti-spam researchers, many of them responsible for fighting spam on ISP networks, that unrestricted use of TCP port 25 must be shut down to the average Internet consumer. There are those who disagree, but their arguments sound obtuse and defeatist rather than actual justifications to not block port 25.

TCP Port 25 is one of the core interfaces of the Internet, through which Internet mail servers typically send mail to each other. It's normal for users to send data out port 25, but they do so to their own ISP's mail server, from which it is forwarded on to the appropriate location. This is the server identified as the outgoing mail server in the mail client configuration.

But if you are infected with a spam zombie—typically, a mail worm with a backdoor used by a spammer to cause your computer to send out massive amounts of spam—the mail does not go through your mail server. It probably goes directly to the server of the target domain for the spam message. The overwhelming majority of users have no need to do this and are perfectly well-served by sending all their mail through the ISP mail servers. It's also worth reiterating that the block need only be put on consumer client systems, not on higher-end services.

Of course there are users who do need access to the port, or who at least want to run their own mail server and don't intend to abuse the privilege. Or they have a need to use a different mail server than the ISPs, perhaps for reasons involving confidentiality. There are ways for ISPs to accommodate these users.

In fact, there's no reason an ISP can't make exceptions for users who want to use port 25 more openly, especially if they agree to rate limits and to configure it securely. The real problem that needs to be solved is the users who don't know they are running a mail server. Such users won't miss not being able to run one.

Alas, this level of customer service may be too much to expect from some ISPs. Hosting servers are also often far too lax in the management of mail on their networks.

Next page: ISPs Fighting Back

But some ISPs are putting their feet down, attempting to stop the abuse. At the forefront of this effort, defying all conventional wisdom, is AOL. In the 90s, an era of very different circumstances, AOL was the single largest source of spam on the Internet, and the ISP's reputation suffered terribly from it. Now not only AOL users have high-quality spam control, but AOL is perhaps the most active ISP in terms of policing the use and abuse of mail.

Consider the rules at AOL's "Technical Standards for E-mail Delivery." AOL makes extensive use of RBL services like MAPS so that they know to block spam from open relays, spambots, systems with unsecured form-mail scripts and other spam sources. They actually use the same services to block spam that comes directly from residential ISP clients that should not be sending mail directly; in other words, if you don't block port 25 yourself, they will do it for you.

The ISP goes further—much further. If the sending system does not have a PTR record (a reverse DNS), it is rejected. If a message contains a hex-encoded URL (like http://%73%70%61%6d/), it is rejected. If more than 10 percent of the sending system's messages to AOL bounce, AOL may reject mail from it in general. If a server rejects 10 percent or more of the bounce messages sent to it, AOL may reject further connections from the server. There are other, similar rules.

All of this is intended to use AOL's size and clout to make other e-mail administrators set up and administer their systems properly. In many cases, the reverse DNS requirement, for example, the administrator finds out that he or she doesn't have a reverse DNS because AOL blocks the mail, and the end result is an improvement for everyone. Mail servers should have a reverse DNS if they have nothing to hide.

Perhaps not everyone can do everything AOL does. It does, after all, have a proprietary internal mail system. But there's a lot we can learn from its example. Carl Hutzler, until recently in charge of AOL's anti-spam efforts (he has now moved on to a position in engineering and development of AOL's e-mail), has been evangelizing this ethic of responsibility by mail admins, especially at ISPs.

Hutzler warns of the lazy approach of relying on filters, as so many ISPs do. It's the easy way out. But anyone with a little experience knows that filters don't even come close to solving the problem, although they can be a useful part of the solution. I've seen messages with overtly pornographic subject lines and bodies make it through three different Bayesian filters. Spammers know how to play with the content of the message to trick filters.

Next page: Port 25, The Nuclear Option

But the technique that generates the most controversy is when an ISP blocks port 25, as SBC recently began to do.

As one prominent researcher put it, blocking port 25 begins the process of shifting the cost burden for spam from the end user to the ISP and others whose sloppiness in administration is responsible for the unchecked proliferation of spam, and these same people are in a position, through responsible system administration, to choke off most of the abuse. He also argued that the cost benefits of fixing their systems are enough incentive to do it.

 

Check out eWEEK.com's Security Center for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer's Weblog.

The depressing counterargument is that many of these systems have excess capacity enough to handle the abuse and that laziness is its own reward. When this is the case, there's no choice but for other ISPs to start blocking the offending ISP, as AOL has done many a time.

This is another point on which a consensus is emerging: that ISPs don't take action to stop spammers on their networks until there is a gun to their heads, generally in the sense that their customers are prevented from sending mail. This is where the major RBLs like Spamhaus and MAPS can play a big role. They have a bad reputation among some, and I've personally been among the collateral damage from an RBL block. But it was my hosting service's fault that my server got on the block because they didn't do anything about the spammer on the same address that I had. Enough of us called and screamed, and something was done about it.

Not every little domain has the clout to block a major ISP. The little guy ends up hurting and angering his customers, but the big ISP won't even notice. But when one major ISP, or a service like MAPS, blocks a major ISP, it gets their attention. The corollary to this is that when you block someone, you need to be responsive when they fix the problem.

The fact that ISPs have no reason to not let users opt out of the system is what cinches it for me. One researcher suggested to me that it was much easier for ISPs just to block a whole range of addresses than to have to put up a system for tracking who was to be blocked and who shouldn't, but this is basically just arguing laziness as an excuse. Besides, the SBC system supports letting users request an opt-out. Why can SBC do it and others can't?

The same researcher was concerned that the opt-out system would be taken over by spammers who would opt-out their zombie systems. But it's not hard to imagine well-designed authentication systems that mail back a message to the customer and require them to connect back.

And as for the added cost to the ISP for this, I'd suggest that they might just save a lot of money by eliminating spammers and mail worms from their networks, but even if you think this is a costly solution, let them charge for the opt-out. Doesn't bother me.

Next page: Port 25, The Counterarguments

Those who argue against ISPs blocking port 25 generally claim that the downsides are high and that spammers will a) evade the blocks and b) easily move to other techniques for sending spam. Joe St. Sauver has made a well-written case for this position. I admire some of his points, but I still disagree with him, and I think half his problem is that he can't see the point through all his defeatism. Namely, even if spammers were to move to other avenues, it's still worth closing port 25 to stop them from using it.

Getting right to what I feel is the main point, that port 25 blocks will be ineffective because spammers will move to other methods to spread spam, St Sauver brushes aside or ignores counterarguments. He cites recent stories that spammers are beginning to use the ISP mail server instead of sending out spam directly from the client system. There are two counterarguments.

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If the ISP requires SMTP AUTH (where you must provide a username and password for the outgoing SMTP mail server as well as the incoming POP3 server), then it will not be a simple matter for the worm to send mail. However, since there are programs available that can read the cached SMTP AUTH credentials from popular mail client programs (click here for one that's sold commercially),

it's not hard to see spam zombies doing the same in the future. They might also do it by monitoring port 25 usage to look for the authentication sequence.

In fact, my own ISP, Speakeasy.net, is very lenient about these things. Speakeasy does not require SMTP AUTH for connections made on their internal network (it does for roaming users), but it says that it monitors mail servers carefully and maintains a number of honeypots on active lookout for malware on its networks.

I spoke to Speakeasy founder and Chairman Michael Apgar, and he insists that a system exhibiting wormlike behavior will not live for long on Speakeasy's network. Within hours the user will be contacted, and if he or she doesn't fix the problem quickly, the plug will be pulled. But Speakeasy is not a conventional ISP; while it's happy to sell to anyone, it has a technically more capable audience who pay more for more open services.

Apgar is quick to agree that mainstream consumer ISPs should be locking down abusable services, and that port 25 is the biggest problem.

Next page: Force the Spammers Onto Official Servers

Even if the zombie successfully is able to send spam through the ISP mail server, we're still better off than before. The ISP can tell, just by looking at mail server logs, who is spamming from its network. ISPs have a cost interest in fixing the situation and arguably are more responsible for doing so since their own servers were involved. Put simply, forcing the spammer onto the ISP mail server facilitates the elimination of zombies. It also gives the ISP the opportunity to rate-limit mail in general, which will not likely affect regular users, but will seriously cut into spammers' ability to spread the message.

I have a similar reaction to St. Sauver's speculation that zombies, blocked in their ability to send spam, will instead be used for even worse things like denial-of-service attacks. This is not hard to imagine, but while much of the world puts up with systems sending spam, they would feel different about a DOS army. And I can't see that the market for DOS armies scales in the same way that the spam market does. It's just not as big a threat.

He also points out that spammers could still evade blocks on port 25 at the network periphery by spamming inside the network—e.g., to other customers of the same ISP on their subnet. Of course, they will only be able to do so if the recipient mail server is on the same subnet, and this is highly unlikely on a large consumer ISP network.

While most of his writing is laboriously pessimistic, St. Sauver does have interesting constructive criticism. He urges those who would fight spam to focus not on the spam leaving the network but on the traffic coming in to the spambot. He asserts (this is counter to my understanding) that spambots don't typically construct the e-mails they send out programmatically but pass on what they receive from the outside. Whether this is true or not is beside the valid point he makes that it should be possible to look for the command/control coming into the network from spammers. While these commands come in on nonstandard ports, they are known (they have to be, or spammers couldn't find them either).

Finally, for all their claims that easy alternatives exist to port 25, they haven't come up with any. The first port usually listed is TCP 587, but like many of the potential alternatives, it's an authenticated port, so it's not blindly open for spamming use.

In the end, the biggest factor in whether ISPs will play hardball with spammers is whether they want to have to go to the problem of taking out the garbage and keeping their place clean. Some ISPs have complained to me about others who don't seem to care if their networks are used to send out billions of spam messages and mail worms. They don't even look at their own log files!

But the day is coming when these ISPs won't be able to coast through their own laziness and sloppiness. The use of RBLs like MAPS and other blocks of known spammer systems is an increasingly important technique, and if worms really do move to using the ISP mail server, then ISPs who don't do anything about it will find themselves blocked completely by the clean ISPs that are sick and tired of taking abuse.

I don't expect everyone to clean up their act, but think we're moving to an era of unofficial quality standards, of black and white lists, where ISPs will "protect" their customers from the red-light districts of the Internet. It's not perfect, but it's better than what we've got now.

Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer has worked in and written about the computer industry since 1983.

Check out eWEEK.com's Security Center for the latest security news, reviews and analysis. And for insights on security coverage around the Web, take a look at eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer's Weblog.


TOPICS: Technical
KEYWORDS: internet; spam
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1 posted on 04/11/2005 10:12:58 AM PDT by ShadowAce
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To: rdb3; chance33_98; Calvinist_Dark_Lord; Bush2000; PenguinWry; GodGunsandGuts; CyberCowboy777; ...

2 posted on 04/11/2005 10:13:32 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: ShadowAce
Chief Justice Marshall held that; "the power to tax was the power to destroy".
Tax spam at any source that it can be found.
3 posted on 04/11/2005 10:26:57 AM PDT by elbucko (A Feral Republican)
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To: ShadowAce
Bah! This guy is not too bright.

Namely, even if spammers were to move to other avenues, it's still worth closing port 25 to stop them from using it.

Sooo.... spammers can find a way around it but it is worth blocking it anyway.... sure, if that is worth it then why not block all ports and shut everything down? ISP's blocking 25 is a stupid solution. Microsoft actually making harder to hijack your computer is the solution.
4 posted on 04/11/2005 10:28:04 AM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: elbucko
If you start taxing spam, you open the door to taxing all e-mail.

That is in addition to deciding whether it's even feasible.

5 posted on 04/11/2005 10:28:45 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: TalonDJ
ISP's blocking 25 is a stupid solution.

I think so too--if you are running a mail server, that mail server can use any port it wants to. There's nothing magical about port 25.

6 posted on 04/11/2005 10:30:06 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: elbucko
That would mean taxing email and would end up requiring the government to track all internet traffic.
"the power to tax was the power to destroy"... You really want to give the federal government the power to destroy email?
7 posted on 04/11/2005 10:30:22 AM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: ShadowAce
Exactly! The server can send OUT any port it wants to. Advocating blocking 25 demonstrates a lack of understanding or internet protocols and packet structure.
8 posted on 04/11/2005 10:31:46 AM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: ShadowAce

I think its an ill advised (not a stupid) solution. So long as I can opt-in (with no extra charge) to having port 25 open I dont see a huge problem with it. Now if they touch 23, ill start the revolution...


9 posted on 04/11/2005 10:41:14 AM PDT by N3WBI3
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To: Dark Wing

ping


10 posted on 04/11/2005 10:41:27 AM PDT by Thud
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To: TalonDJ
Advocating blocking 25 demonstrates a lack of understanding or internet protocols and packet structure.

As outgoing connection dont need to accept on port 25 (start a telnet session to your mailserver and then do a netstat) an ISP can block 25 with minimal impact. Only people who accept connections on 25 would be affected (some ppl like me that run a small mail server) and spambots would be hurt...

11 posted on 04/11/2005 10:43:22 AM PDT by N3WBI3
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To: N3WBI3
Now if they touch 23, ill start the revolution...

You'll still have 443, though...

12 posted on 04/11/2005 10:43:44 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: ShadowAce
You'll still have 443 22, though...

Fixed it for me... :)

13 posted on 04/11/2005 10:45:03 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: TalonDJ
That would mean taxing email..

No. I specifically wrote "spam". Isn't there a difference between the mass e-mailing of commercial messages via the Internet and individual or company e-mail communication? I think there is and spam can be classified as such and therefore taxed (destroyed).

14 posted on 04/11/2005 10:46:03 AM PDT by elbucko (A Feral Republican)
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To: elbucko
Isn't there a difference between the mass e-mailing of commercial messages via the Internet and individual or company e-mail communication?

Technically? No. I subscribe to a couple of (legit) Internet newsletters who have very large subscriber bases. Are those spam when they go out? How do you tell the difference?

15 posted on 04/11/2005 10:48:45 AM PDT by ShadowAce (Linux -- The Ultimate Windows Service Pack)
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To: All
This highway to hell???


16 posted on 04/11/2005 10:52:06 AM PDT by RockinRight (Conservatism is common sense, liberalism is just senseless.)
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To: elbucko
Yes but this would put in place everything the fed need to tax email and leave them with power to determine which emails should and should not be called spam. Companies that send out legit special offer emails to people on a list would be impacted my this. They would either be taxed or have to show records of who signed up for the list to prove they were not unsolicited. I don't want the federal government anywhere near Internet regulating. There are other routes spam senders can use to send stuff to victims. They can't all be blocked.
17 posted on 04/11/2005 10:53:08 AM PDT by TalonDJ
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To: ShadowAce

I would think that the main problem would be that the ISPs want to maintain common carrier status. If they start becoming responsible for what users do, there's no end to it.


18 posted on 04/11/2005 10:55:16 AM PDT by proxy_user
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To: ShadowAce

ack you fixed mine as well, cant believe I put 23 in there... ok they can have 23... 22 is where we hold the line ;)


19 posted on 04/11/2005 10:55:26 AM PDT by N3WBI3
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To: elbucko

Every plan I have so far seen to tax spam was basically to tax ALL email by a very small amount (1/10 cent) and those that send up huge amounts of it would get hit hard by it. You might want to take note that a lot of spam gets sent from the computers of victims whose computers have had a program implanted on them. They might use their computer without ever knowing it is there until they get a huge tax bill from Uncle Sam.


20 posted on 04/11/2005 10:56:28 AM PDT by TalonDJ
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