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The
Cybermagic of Whitelists |
by:
Niall
Roche |
Before
we start getting deep into the meat of this
article it's important to explain some standard
terminology to make sure the rest of this
article makes sense.
*An IP address is a number which identifies
your location on the Internet.
*A blacklist is a list of IP addresses which
your antispam software uses to block incoming
spam.
*A whitelist is the exact opposite of a
blacklist.
A whitelist is a predefined list of IP addresses
that are allowed to send email to and receive
email from each other. Blacklists exclude
known and suspected spammers. Whitelists
can be used to exclude everyone except known
IP addresses. Think of it like this. A whitelist
is a like having a phonebook which is owned
by a small group of people who only wish
to speak directly to each other. They don't
want just anybody ringing them. Not only
that but the entire group need to approve
new phone numbers before they appear in
this exclusive phonebook.
To send email to a whitelist you must be
approved by the owner of the whitelist.
This is a lot like the double optin systems
used by legimiate ezines and mailing list
owners. Whitelists are the nightclub bouncers
of the virtual world - if you ain't on the
list you ain't getting in. Simple but very
effective.
A real world example of a whitelist would
be if two companies wanted to exchange email
only with each other. These companies could
implement a whitelist that contained the
IP address for just the two email servers
that want to send email to each other. That
would mean that any email coming from an
IP address not on the whitelist would be
returned to sender. For companies they can
ensure that employees are only dealing with
work related email and not chatting with
their friends.
The benefits of whitelists are many but
proper management of the whitelists is equally
important. Misuse of whitelists will only
lead to more headaches for everyone involved
with missing email, irate customers and
IT departments doing overtime just being
the tip of the iceberg.
If you'd like to learn more about spam then
drop by http://www.spam-site.com today.
About the author:
This article was submitted courtesy of Spam-Site.com
which reviews spam
filters and also offers advice on stopping
spam for free.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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