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Foreward

California.com encourages ethical advertising and business practices. To that extent, if you're going to advertise your business on the internet, either using, or hosted by California.com, you should read RFC 3098 and adhere to its guidelines. This will ensure you step on as few toes as possible, and most importantly, that you don't spam, which can cause you to loose your account with California.com. You should read our TOA as well, as California.com has an active policy prohibiting spam.

RFC 3098 has several good reasons why you shouldn't spam, and I'll give you another, we impose a hefty "clean up cost" on customers of ours who do spam. This is the cost of the time the administrators of California.com have to spend to resolve complaints, delete your accounts, cleanup your mailbox, and deal with possible blacklisting that needs to be resolved. If you don't understand the cost of spam before you send it, I guarentee you'll understand the costs when we terminate your account.

Now that it's been established that we do not support spam, we do try to filter it from our customers mailboxes, so without further ado...

Topics

How we filter

California.com's Mail Server employs several spam blocking methods outlined below to prevent incoming spam from reaching the server, and reaching users of California.com. I'll first outline the filters, then what necessitated them.
Internal Blacklists
The first line of defence against spammers is a blacklist maintained on the mail server itself. This list is not queryable by the public, and is maintained solely by the staff of California.com. Nominations to this list are made either by persistent abuse of the mail server (which trips a script monitoring the mail logs) or abuse of the staff or customers of California.com. This list consists solely of mail servers, and not individual addresses. If you were blocked based on the internal list, it's not personal. We don't block individual addresses, only servers seen to be a major spam problem.
DSBL.org
We use DSBL's confirmed list (list.dsbl.org) as a supplement to our internal blacklists. This contains a variety of different kinds of spam hosts, open proxies, and open relays, but all hosts are listed based on test results. IE: it's nothing personal if you're listed, you're just (probably accidentally) aiding spammers.

Spamhaus Block Lists
To keep out as much spam as possible, outside lists identifying known spam sources are a necessity. Minimizing false positives is however a high priority that fits well with the goals of the SBL.
ClamAV Icon
Clam Antivirus
Clam Antivirus is a GPL virus scanner that guards against email borne viruses by scanning all mail for virus signatures at delivery time. There is a delay between when a virus is released, and when a signature can be created, so this scanner won't catch everything, and emails that are virus infected that make it into your inbox won't be automatically removed when the definition is created.

Why we filter

These layers of protection should come as no suprise to most people, but some clarification is needed as to exactly why we chose to implement these filters in this order and in the way we implemented them.

1. Time
Think about the amount of time you spend sorting through your mailbox each day, throwing out the spam messages, searching for genuine business leads, or other emails useful to your business. We do this too of course, and frankly, it's a drag on business. How many times have you spent more time sorting spam out of your mailbox than you have actually reading the messages you received?
2. Money
All Internet Connected companies pay for bandwidth in some way. Some sites pay by the gigabyte per month, some pay for the capacity of their lines. In either case, the cost is directly associated with the amount of traffic that is passing (or can pass) over the connection. Spam increases the load on these connections without the consent of the receiver, effectively increasing the bill for internet connectivity, while providing NO BENEFIT to the company paying the increased bill.
Also, think about the Time you spent from #1, sorting your email, and potentially reading spam because it wasn't so easy to figure out that it was spam... that time has a value to your company. Time is money right?
3. Customer Input
I've heard several complaints from businesses claiming not to be spamming, and asking why we blacklisted them. The answer is really quite simple in most cases, I asked our customers, or received complaints from our customers. You see, this isn't a one way street. Spamming to advertise your business will definately get name recognition of your business out there, it just may not be the kind of recognition you want.
4. Societal Input
Take a look at the Spam in the Media section of this page. Notice a trend? The news reports on spam are coming faster and faster these days as more action is being taken against spammers. Spamming is decreasing the usability of banner ads, popups, and legitimate newsletters on the internet, as many are being filtered, blocked, or ignored thanks to the scammers who have taken advantage of the medium. Spam costs aren't just money, it's also trust that's being lost, and very quickly.

The problem is that spammers themselves never bear the real costs of spamming. The costs are borne exclusively by the recipient, and hence the term "cost shifting," which you may hear a lot when referring to spam. Spammers themselves are only sending out traffic which they see as beneficial to them, and hence the costs we as members of the internet community bear as unwilling recipients of that traffic aren't taken into account.

How can I filter my California.com mailbox?

If you want to enable the content filtering (which is off by default) you can enable it on the server, or a client side mail program. If you're going to use this type of filtering, we recommend doing it on the server, as it saves disk space, and makes the process transparent to you once it's setup. The changes will also survive you changing mail programs, using the webmail interface while on the road, etc.

Server Side Filtering

California.com's server side filtering uses a feature of our mail server known as "Rulesets" which are extremely flexible mail processing rules. To make things easier, we have created a script which automatically adds the appropriate rules to your account for you. As an improvement over our earlier version, you can now change these settings directly from your webmail account. Log into webmail to take advantate of these new anti-spam features.

The technology that makes these filters possible is a feature of CommuniGate Pro called Rulesets. These rulesets are very powerful, and care must be taken to ensure you don't inadvertently tell the ruleset processor to do something you really don't intend. Since our script creates the anti-spam rules you need, it is not nessisary for you to use these rules directly, however, we have created a primer on using rulesets, in case you want to write your own.

For a primer on using rulesets, click here.

Client Side filtering

Some mail programs have equivalent features that allow you to filter email on the client side. We don't really recommend this option, as it can be technically complex, but as with Server Side filtering, basically you're looking for a header in the email that says how likely that email is to be spam.

X-Spam-Flag: YES SpamAssassin has marked this email as spam
X-Spam-Status: Yes, hits=xx.x required=5.0 tests=xxxxxxx This email has been marked as spam, hits=xx.x is the score, a score of 5 is required, and here are the tests that were matched against this spam.
X-Spam-Level: ======= This is a bar indicator of the "hits=xx.x" field in the previous header. It's convinient to filter on this header because you can easily set the sensitivity.

Spam in the Media
(Articles in red are no longer availible)

Found a news article we should feature here?
Email chales+spamnews@california.com with the story!

Non-Media Viewpoints

CaliforniaCom Inc.
1624 Franklin St. suite # 1022
Oakland Ca. 94612 USA
info@california.com
510-287-8450 office
800-450-1539 office
510-287-8454 fax

This page last updated on Sunday, January 14, 2007 10:06 PM.