David Cassel (destiny@wco.com)
Mon, 28 Oct 1996 22:33:03 -0800 (PST)
It's been a bad week for Ron Newman. First he received five copies of the mass-mailed child pornography spam over three of his accounts. Then, AOL mistakenly put his ISP on the list of automatically-blocked sites. "Several AOL users have already lost e-mail that I sent them yesterday," Newman said in a Usenet post Friday. Protests from his domain would fall on deaf ears, since they'd also presumably be filtered. "And if I get spammed *by* an AOL user," he added, "I no longer have any way to complain to AOL, because the 'abuse' address at AOL is probably filtering out my mail as well." Even more ironic, Newman is a well-respected MIT graduate who established a set of technical standards for evaluating newsreaders--and he was an early figure in the internet's clash with the church of Scientology. "I've never heard of a single net-abuse complaint against my ISP," Newman observed. This looks like a mistake. In their war on Cyber Promotions, America Online blocked delivery for mail from cyber-promo.com, cyberpromo.com, and cyberpromotions.com. But there's also a Massachusetts internet service called cybercom.net--Newman's ISP. And AOL put them on the blocked list. But unlike the spam-only domains, this one has over 1500 users--including the Art Institute of Boston! This highlights the pitfalls of the way AOL implemented their mail controls. All 6 million of the service's members found the blocking had already taken place. It went into effect immediately, and e-mail delivery for blocked domains only returned if users pro-actively disabled it. And AOL appears to have deleted all e-mail from the banished domains--including Ron's--the day they put the filters onto the 6 million accounts! "They should have given every AOL user several days' advance notice that the blocking would begin," Newman said in an interview, "or required an affirmative decision by each user to begin having their mail filtered." Instead, the corporate giant imposed their enemies list from above. For 6 million users, Ron Newman and his fellow users were "vanished" overnight. More importantly, no one knew why. "The list of sites to be blocked should include the specific reason that each site is on the list," Newman continued. "Every AOL user should have ready access to this information." He points out that AOL users can't even add or remove sites. (Though one Usenet post suggested this is an unpublicized feature of AOL's mailreader.) And the incident suggests another important feature. "Mail should *never* be silently "eaten"..." ("I no longer get a bounce message even when I send to a non-existent user name at AOL!" Newman's Usenet post observed Friday.) So what does he think of AOL's new filtering system? "I think it sucks!" "Nothing like having a 800-lb gorilla sit on you," one observer commented privately. The irony is, it's trivial for junk mailers to elude AOL's blocks simply by creating new domain names. (A point AOL conceded to Interactive Week [9/5/96]) And of course, the blocking controls won't affect spam originating from AOL--a British newspaper reported that up to 9,000 people received last week's AOL-domain child pornography solicitation. AOL's moves appear mostly for show--a test mailbox tonight still contains 5 pieces of junk mail. While cybercom.net wondered if they'd be the first casualty of AOL's once-a-week update policy for the blocked-domains list, AOL quietly scratched them off the list Monday afternoon--"pending a further review" AOL's spokesman told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. While AOL's postmaster publicly announced the new mail controls Friday, he was noticeably silent about the correction. Possibly because it calls attention to flaws in AOL's procedure. "The AOL tool 'silently' blocks incoming mail, without notifying the sender, as is customary on the Internet," Art Kramer wrote in the Journal-Constitution. "So senders at the 53 domains are not aware that any e-mail to AOL users has been intercepted and destroyed." "I'd like AOL to tell me and my ISP what is going on," Newman told me Monday night. "So far I've heard *nothing* from AOL other than 'we're looking into it.' I had to read Usenet to learn that AOL had removed us from the block list -- just as I had to read Usenet a few days ago to learn that AOL had put us on the list in the first place." In Newman's opinion, AOL's policy is "fundamentally flawed". "It is *wrong* for AOL to produce a blacklist without an accompanying document explaining why each particular site is on the blacklist. It is *wrong* for AOL to silently discard mail instead of rejecting or bouncing it." For Newman, AOL's actions raise the specter of arbitrary mail disruptions. "If AOL doesn't review its policies, what happened to Cybercom this week could happen to *your* domain next week." Footnote: the court date for AOL's suit against the junk-mail king begins two weeks from Tuesday. THE LAST LAUGH One reader reports that an ad for AOL's "PrimeHost" web-hosting service appeared in an unusual Yahoo category. "Anti-AOL sites". Destiny AOL Watch - http://www.wco.com/~destiny/time.htm ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~ Please forward with subscription information and headers in-tact. To subscribe to this moderated list, send a message to MAJORDOMO@CLOUD9.NET containing the phrase SUBSCRIBE AOL-SUX in the message body. ~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~++~