Are you a Firefox user? Have you heard that Mozilla has launched a new email relay service called Firefox Private Relay ? The idea is to provide an ’email alias’ wherever a company or a service asks for your email address, so that you can avoid giving out your actual address and protect your identity. . The product is currently in the testing stage and only available as a browser extension for Firefox. Plus, you’ll have to request an invite on the site to get it. The inner workings of this product are similar to what Sign in with Apple does while requiring an email ID. However, just to be clear, this is not a sign-in service. The link for this article located at The Next Web is no longer available. . The item is presently undergoing evaluation and is exclusively accessible as a browser add-on for Chrome.. Firefox, Email Relay, Privacy Protection, Browser Extension. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Do you want to be aggressive, very aggressive in stopping spam? Then what you might want to do is to set up a fake open proxy or e-mail relay as a honeypot.. . .. Do you want to be aggressive, very aggressive in stopping spam? Then what you might want to do is to set up a fake open proxy or e-mail relay as a honeypot. Honeypots are an ancient, but still effective security tool. Traditionally a honeypot is a server that looks like it has very attractive files and has a security hole in it. Crackers will then break into the honeypot in search of pirated copies of games, trade secrets or such. In reality, there's nothing of any real value in the honeypot. By watching who breaks into the honeypot, you can audit would-be attackers as they hunt for the goodies until you know exactly who they are and you can then put the cuffs on them. Some black-list administrators, notably Ron Guilmette, has taken this basic idea and turned it into an anti-spam approach. It works in exactly the same way. Since a spammer doesn't know what proxies or relays are open to abuse by spammers, they are constantly testing sites for new and vulnerable relays. In fact, a spammer probably has no idea what sites he is using to spread spam. Most simply rely on automatic scripts to find new sites as old open relays are either fixed or knocked off the net by being listed on a blacklist. If you're not sure yourself about whether your mail servers are open, you should get a copy of Mail Relay Tester or run the Abuse.net mail relay test, and test out your own system. The link for this article located at Enterprise IT Planet is no longer available. . Investigate proactive methods to combat unwanted emails by implementing honeypots alongside relay test protocols to fortify your defenses.. Honeypots, Spam Prevention, Email Relay Testing. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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