Showing posts with label stuttering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stuttering. Show all posts

Monday, July 9, 2007

Hey, spammer! Here's a list for you!

Last week I started noticing from my log summaries that my mail servers had seen a lot more mail to non-existent users than usual. This usually happens when somebody has picked one of our domains as the home of their made-up return addresses for their spam run. This time, from the looks of it, the spam runs were mainly targeted at Russian and Ukrainian users. At least that's where most of the backscatter appears to have come from.

As I've written before in the PF tutorial and the malware paper (updated version available as this blog post -- that's the end of today's plugging, I promise), I've used the "Unknown user" messages as a valuable data source for my spamtrap list, just quitely adding addresses that looked really unlikely to ever become valid. After a brief airing on the OpenBSD-misc mailing list and running it by my colleagues at Datadok and Dataped, I've decided to take it a bit further.

Now that I've got a list of addresses which will never receive any legitimate mail, I really want spammers to try to send mail to those addresses. After all, if they send anything to an address which consists of a random string with one of our domains stuck on after the '@', we know it's all spam from there on.

We don't care about the rest, for the next 24 hours. Your SMTP dialogue with us (actually our spamd) will be all a-stutter, receiving answers one byte at the time until you give up. For the record, that usually takes about 400 seconds, with the really imbecile ones taking a lot longer. See the paper or the tutorial for some numbers.

The other possibility is of course that your system is set up in a way which makes it actually receive and try to deliver spam. Some of the spam will be addressed to non-existent users in your domain, so if your users receive spam, you will be trying to send bounce messages back to the purported sender for spam to non-existent users. That's tough, kid. If you're set up that way, your machine will be treated to the tarpit here for the next 24 hours. All a-stutter and all that. Repeat offenders stay there longer.

Now for the spamtrap list, I've checked that my colleagues and associates have never actually wanted to use those addresses for anything, and I made this page which wraps it all in a bit of explanation. For some reason, the list keeps growing each time I look at my log summaries.

When I get around to it and find a visually not-too-horrible way to do it, I'll include links to that page where they fit naturally on our web sites. In the meantime, here's hoping that the spammers' address harvesting robots find this list and put it to good use.

The chapter, it's improving. More later.

UPDATE 12-jul-2007: The softer side of me ponders the possibility of sending email form letters to the various postmaster@s with the URL to this blog post. On the other hand, I'm not sure I'm ready for another round of finding out that postmaster@ is in fact not deliverable at a surprising number of sites around the world.

One other thing I've noticed since I published the traplist is that bounces to addresses like mixt.apex.dp.ua-1184227575-testing@datadok.no have started appearing in the logs. I don't see how messages like these could be useful by themselves, but the addresses are of course obvious traplist material.

13-jul-2007: Oddly enough, there's still a stream of backscatter, and my logs tell me a few new addresses turn up every day. This morning's fresh ones were careersogt2083@datadok.no, phalanxesxb88@datadok.no and retryingvtt@datadok.no. Another few bytes to help weed out the bad ones early, thanks to the robots out there.