Digex and Akamai are raping the ARIN whois database

Chris Woodfield rekoil at semihuman.com
Tue Sep 4 20:43:32 UTC 2001


How 'bout only sending marketing emails to email address that specifically
REQUEST to receive them? 

Sending marketing email to addresses on any type of "purchased" list is,
by nature, unsolicited. I'm sure it's bulk. Which makes it look awfully
pink and meaty to me.

-C

On Tue, 4 Sep 2001, Avi Freedman wrote:

> 
> In article <10184.15415.25258 at avi.netaxs.com> you wrote:
> 
> : Nothing like the smell of spam in the morning - coming to you through the
> : "benevolent" acts of Akamai and Digex - sent to POC handles blatantly stolen
> : from ARIN's whois database.
> 
> : Yo, Digex: this just reminds me how much your "sales team" sucked the last
> : time around, when there was a DS3 contract up for grabs on an RFP.
> : This spam certainly cuts you out of any future consideration for a while:
> : You'll find yourself in good company with Savvis, I am sure.
> 
> Very sorry this happened.  Marketing purchased a 'trial version' of
> a list that apparently had ARIN-gleanings.  Use of that list has been
> suspended with all partners, and we are working on ways to make sure that 
> we can 'pattern match' any such similar crud from future lists.  This is
> the first of the lists that has been a problem (though we have in the
> past had one or two salespeople who were quickly unconfused on individual
> solicitations), and we intend to make sure it won't happen again.
> 
> If anyone has any heuristics for ensuring that lists don't have automated
> new-domain or SWIP gleanings, I'd appreciate them; for now we'll just 
> search for hostmaster@, ipspace@, and other role-looking accounts.
> 
> Sorry,
> 
> Avi (speaking as Chief Network Architect, Akamai)
> 




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