Forum Moderators: phranque
There is no such URL on my site. Attempting to go there confirms the fact -- I get a message saying the URL doesn't exist. Nor have I ever noticed it in the logs before.
So -- how could it have transferred seven megs? And to whom?
I'd ask if anyone can offer a guess as to what's going on, but for all I know, this is something perfectly normal, and the only reason it seems odd to me is that I don't know enough about webmastering to understand it.
So my question is -- can anyone tell me where these hits and this data transfer are coming from? Or have I truly encountered something weird?
Thanks.
Another question, possibly related: By the nature of my site, I get a fair number of questions from strangers, which I generally try to reply to in a reasonably timely manner (tho if things get busy I'm not a fanatic about it). Three times since the switch, a reply has bounced back, with a claim that the replyee's ISP won't accept anything from my domain because of alleged spam originating from it.
I've never spammed anyone in my life. I'm not too worried about this because after all, I'm just doing a free favor for a stranger, and so what if their ISP is too finnicky to let me communicate with them? (I use another address for most business, so I have no trouble reaching the people I actually have to deal with.)
Still, an unjust accusation is an unjust accusation. Like I said, this has happened only since the switch to SquirrelMail.
(By the way, in all three cases, the ISP involved was something called Road Runner, at rr.com. Is it just that they've run amuck on the subject of security or something?)
Thanks for the reply, takagi, and for any other info you or anyone else can supply.
Three times since the switch, a reply has bounced back, with a claim that the replyee's ISP won't accept anything from my domain because of alleged spam originating from it.
You are probably on a spam blacklist. The various blacklists list IPs and/or domain names that have been known for spamming (or open relays), and spam filtering agents will use these lists. There's at least one list that I'm aware of (SPEWS.org) that lists the entire net block that the offending IP is part of - so if someone in your netblock gets listed it affects you as well. I feel for you if this happened to you.