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A New Tool In The Spam War
Ethan Preston, 2005-01-12

Arbitration is part of the next wave of security measures, and can be effective against spammers who illegally harvest email addresses from a honeypot on your website.

Comments Mode:
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-13
Anonymous (2 replies)
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Anonymous (1 replies)
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Dmitriy M
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-24
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-14
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-14
Anonymous
Do I see a hole in this? 2005-01-14
Tom Haddon (1 replies)
Do I see a hole in this? 2005-01-19
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Do I see a hole in this? 2005-10-03
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Anonymous
Re: A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-15
Robin Green (1 replies)
Re: A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-17
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Anonymous
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-18
Anonymous
Issues in reliability 2005-01-19
Cohen
so all an spammer needs to do... 2005-01-19
Bipin Gautam <visitbipin.@hotmail.com>
Cross contamination = reasonable doubt 2005-01-24
Zaferus (1 replies)
Cross contamination = reasonable doubt 2005-01-25
Anonymous
If I understand correctly the website dynamically generates the e-mail addresses for each IP connection. Therefore the only place where a particular address will be seen is from that particular IP address. So there's no way that the same e-mail address will be generated for two different connections.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/291/30240#30240
A New Tool In The Spam War 2005-01-24
Anonymous
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