Network Working Group                                        G. Lindberg
Request for Comments: 2505             Chalmers University of Technology
BCP: 30                                                    February 1999
Category: Best Current Practice


               Anti-Spam Recommendations for SMTP MTAs

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the
  Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This memo gives a number of implementation recommendations for SMTP,
  [1], MTAs (Mail Transfer Agents, e.g. sendmail, [8]) to make them
  more capable of reducing the impact of spam(*).

  The intent is that these recommendations will help clean up the spam
  situation, if applied on enough SMTP MTAs on the Internet, and that
  they should be used as guidelines for the various MTA vendors. We are
  fully aware that this is not the final solution, but if these
  recommendations were included, and used, on all Internet SMTP MTAs,
  things would improve considerably and give time to design a more long
  term solution. The Future Work section suggests some ideas that may
  be part of such a long term solution. It might, though, very well be
  the case that the ultimate solution is social, political, or legal,
  rather than technical in nature.

  The implementor should be aware of the increased risk of denial of
  service attacks that several of the proposed methods might lead to.
  For example, increased number of queries to DNS servers and increased
  size of logfiles might both lead to overloaded systems and system
  crashes during an attack.

  A brief summary of this memo is:

  o   Stop unauthorized mail relaying.
  o   Spammers then have to operate in the open; deal with them.
  o   Design a mail system that can handle spam.





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1. Introduction

  This memo is a Best Current Practice (BCP) RFC.  As such it should be
  used as a guideline for SMTP MTA implementors to make their products
  more capable of preventing/handling spam.  Despite this being its
  primary goal, an intended side effect is to suggest to the
  sysadmin/Postmaster community which "anti spam knobs" an SMTP MTA is
  expected to have.

  However, this memo is not generally intended as a description on how
  to operate an SMTP MTA - which "knobs" to turn and how to configure
  the options. If suggestions are provided, they will be clearly marked
  and they should be read as such.

1.1. Background

  Mass unsolicited electronic mail, often known as spam(*), has
  increased considerably during a short period of time and has become a
  serious threat to the Internet email community as a whole. Something
  needs to be done fairly quickly.

  The problem has several components:

  o   It is high volume, i.e. people get a lot of such mail in their
      mailboxes.

  o   It is completely "blind", i.e. there is no correlation between
      the receivers' areas of interest and the actual mail sent out (at
      least if one assumes that not everybody on the Internet is
      interested in porno pictures and spam programs...).

  o   It costs real money for the receivers. Since many receivers pay
      for the time to transfer the mailbox from the (dialup) ISP to
      their computer they in reality pay real money for this.

  o   It costs real money for the ISPs. Assume one 10 Kbyte message
      sent to 10 000 users with their mailboxes at one ISP host; that
      means an unsolicited, unexpected, storage of 100 Mbytes.  State
      of the art disks, 4 Gbyte, can take 40 such message floods before
      they are filled. It is almost impossible to plan ahead for such
      "storms".

  o   Many of the senders of spam are dishonest, e.g. hide behind false
      return addresses, deliberately write messages to look like they
      were between two individuals so the spam recipient will think it
      was just misdelivered to them, say the message is "material you





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      requested" when you never asked for it, and generally do
      everything they can without regard to honesty or ethics, to try
      to get a few more people to look at their message.

      In fact some of the spam-programs take a pride in adding false
      info that will "make the ISPs scratch their heads".

      It is usually the case that people who send in protests (often
      according to the instructions in the mail) find their mail
      addresses added to more lists and sold to other parties.

  o   It is quite common practice to make use of third party hosts as
      relays to get the spam mail sent out to the receivers. This theft
      of service is illegal in most - if not all - countries (at least
      in the US spammers have been successfully sued).  However, with
      the original sender in the US, the (innocent) relay in Sweden and
      the list of receivers back in the US, the legal process of
      getting damages from the spammers becomes extremely difficult.

1.2. Scope

  This memo has no intention of being the final solution to the spam
  problem.

  If, however, enough Internet MTAs did implement enough of the rules
  described below (especially the Non-Relay rules), we would get the
  spammers out in the open, where they could be taken care of. Either
  pure legal actions would help, or we can block them technically using
  other rules described below (since the Non-Relay rules now make them
  appear openly, with their own hosts and domains, we can apply various
  access filters against them). In reality, a combination of legal and
  technical methods is likely to give the best result.

  This way, the spam problem could be reduced enough to allow the
  Internet community to design and deploy a real and general solution.

  But, please note:

      The Non-Relay rules are not in themselves enough to stop spam.
      Even if 99% of the SMTP MTAs implemented them from Day 1,
      spammers would still find the remaining 1% and use them. Or
      spammers would just switch gear and connect directly to each and
      every recipient host; that will be to a higher cost for the
      spammer, but is still quite likely.

  Even though IPv6 deployment may be near, the spam problem is here
  already and thus this memo restricts itself to the current IPv4.




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1.3. Terminology

  Throughout this memo we will use the terminology of RFC2119, [4]:

  o   "MUST"

      This word or the adjective "REQUIRED" means that the item is an
      absolute requirement.

  o   "SHOULD"

      This word or the adjective "RECOMMENDED" means that there may
      exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to ignore this
      item, but the full implications should be understood and the case
      carefully weighed before choosing a different course.

  o   "MAY"

      This word or the adjective "OPTIONAL" means that this item is
      truly optional. One vendor may choose to include the item because
      a particular marketplace requires it or because it enhances the
      product, for example; another vendor may omit the same item.

1.4. Using DNS information

  In the memo we sometimes use the term "host name" or "domain name"
  which should be interpreted as a Fully Qualified Domain Name, FQDN.
  By this we mean the name returned from the DNS in response to a PTR
  query (.IN-ADDR.ARPA), i.e. when an IP address is translated to a
  name, or we mean a name with a DNS A or MX record associated to it
  RFC1034, [5], and RFC1035, [6].

  When we suggest use of FQDNs rather than IP addresses this is because
  FQDNs are intuitively much easier to use. However, all such usage
  depends heavily on DNS and .IN-ADDR.ARPA (PTR) information. Since it
  is fairly easy to forge that, either by false cache information
  injected in DNS servers or spammers running their own DNS with false
  information in them, host and domain names must be used with care,
  e.g. verified so that the translation address->name corresponds to
  name->address. With Secure DNS, RFC2065, [7], things will improve,
  since spoofing of .IN-ADDR.ARPA will no longer be possible.

  One of the recommendations is about verifying "MAIL From:" (envelope
  originator) domains with the DNS (assure that appropriate DNS
  information exists for the domain). When making use of this
  capability there are a few things to consider:





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  (1) One must not forget the increased amount of DNS queries which
      might result in problems for the DNS server itself to cope with
      the load.  This itself can result in a denial of service attack
      against the DNS server just by sending email to a site.

  (2) It should be noted that with negative caching in the DNS, forged
      DNS responses can be used to mount denial of service attacks.
      For example, if a site is known to implement a FQDN validity
      check on addresses in SMTP "MAIL From:" commands, an attacker may
      be able to use negative DNS responses to effectively block
      acceptance of mail from one or more origins. Because of this, one
      should carefully check the DNS server in use, e.g. how it
      verifies that incoming responses correspond to outstanding
      queries, to minimize the risk for such attacks.

  (3) For early versions of spam software FQDN checks provide quite
      some relief, since that software generates mail with completely
      bogus "MAIL From:" that will never get into the system if
      verified with the DNS. This is in active use at many
      installations today and it does reduce spam.

  On the other hand, sites with weak DNS connectivity may find their
  legitimate mail having problems reaching destinations due to DNS
  timeouts when the receivers verify their "MAIL From:". However, since
  DNS information is handled asynchronously and is cached even though
  the initial requester has given up, chances are high that the
  necessary information is there at a later attempt.

  For later versions of spam software, a check of "MAIL From:" is much
  less likely to help, since spam software evolves too and will start
  using existing mail addresses (whether or not that is legal is beyond
  the scope of this memo). But, at least the Internet will benefit from
  the side effect that this test stops typos and misconfigured UAs.

1.5. Where to block spam, in SMTP, in RFC822 or in the UA

  Our basic assumption is that refuse/accept is handled at the SMTP
  layer and that an MTA that decides to refuse a message should do so
  while still in the SMTP dialogue. First, this means that we do not
  have to store a copy of a message we later decide to refuse and
  second, our responsibility for that message is low or none - since we
  have not yet read it in, we leave it to the sender to handle the
  error.








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1.6. SMTP Return Codes

  SMTP has several classes of Return Codes, see [1] for a discussion:

  o   5xx
      is a Permanent Negative Completion reply (Fatal Error) and
      results in the mail transfer being terminated and the mail
      returned to sender.

  o   4xx
      is a Transient Negative Completion reply (Temporary Error) and
      results in the mail transfer being put back on queue again and a
      new attempt being made later.

  o   2xx
      is a Positive Completion reply and indicates that the MTA now has
      taken responsibility for the delivery of the mail.

  When making use of the options/"knobs" described in this memo there
  are a few things to consider:

  For some events, like "Denied - you're on the spammer's list", 5xx
  may be the correct Return Code, since it terminates the session at
  once and we are done with it (assuming that the spammer plays by the
  SMTP rules, which he may decide not to do - in fact he can put the
  mail back on queue or turn to some other host, regardless of Return
  Code). However, a 5xx mistake in a configuration may cause legitimate
  mail to bounce, which may be quite unfortunate.

  Therefore, we suggest 4xx as the Return Code for most cases. Since
  that is a non fatal error, the mail gets re-queued at the sender and
  we have at least some time to discover and correct configuration
  errors, rather than have mail bounce (typically this is when we
  refuse to Relay for domains that we actually should accept since we
  are on their MX list).

  A 4xx response also makes the spammer's host re-queue the mail and if
  it really is his own host who gets to do this it is probably a good
  thing - fill up his disks with his own spam. If, on the other hand,
  he is using someone else as Relay Host, all the spam mail being
  queued is a fairly strong evidence that something bad is going on and
  should cause attention at that Relay Host.

  However, 4xx Temporary Errors may have unexpected interaction with
  MX-records. If the receiving domain has several MX records and the
  lowest preference MX-host refuses to receive mail with a "451"
  Response Code, the sending host may choose to - and often will - use
  the next host on the MX list.



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  If that next MX host does not have the same refuse-list, it will of
  course accept the mail, only to find that the final host still
  refuses to receive that piece of mail ("MAIL From:"). Our intent was
  to make the offending mail stay at the offending sender's host and
  fill up his mqueue disk, but it all ended up at our friend, the next
  lowest preference MX-host.

  Finally, it has been suggested that one may use a 2xx Return Code but
  nevertheless decide not to forward or receive the spam mail; typical
  alternatives are to store it elsewhere (e.g. /dev/null). This clearly
  violates the intent of RFC821 and should not be done without careful
  consideration - instead of blindly dropping the mail one could re-
  queue it and manually (or automagically) inspect whether it is spam
  or legitimate mail and whether it should be dropped or forwarded.

1.7. Mailing Lists

  An MTA that also has the ability to handle mailing lists and expand
  that to a number of recipients, needs to be able to authorize senders
  and protect its lists from spam. The mechanisms for this may be very
  different from those for ordinary mail and ordinary users and are not
  covered in this memo.

2. Recommendations

  Here we first give a brief list of recommendations, followed by a
  more thorough discussion of each of them. We will also give
  recommendations on things NOT to do, things that may seem natural in
  the spam fight (and might even work so far) but that might wreak
  havoc on Internet mail and thus may cause more damage than good.

  1)  MUST be able to restrict unauthorized use as Mail Relay.

  2)  MUST be able to provide "Received:" lines with enough
      information to make it possible to trace the mail path, despite
      spammers use forged host names in HELO statements etc.

  3)  MUST be able to provide local log information that makes it
      possible to trace the event afterwards.

  4)  SHOULD be able to log all occurrences of anti-relay/anti-spam
      actions.

  5)  SHOULD be able to refuse mail from a host or a group of hosts.

  6a) MUST NOT refuse "MAIL From: <>".

  6b) MUST NOT refuse "MAIL From: <[email protected]>".



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  7a) SHOULD be able to refuse mail from a specific "MAIL From:"
      user, <[email protected]>.

  7b) SHOULD be able to refuse mail from an entire "MAIL From:"  domain
      <.*@domain.example>.

  8)  SHOULD be able to limit ("Rate Control") mail flow.

  9)  SHOULD be able to verify "MAIL From:" domain (using DNS or
      other means).

  10) SHOULD be able to verify <local-part> in outgoing mail.

  11) SHOULD be able to control SMTP VRFY and EXPN.

  12) SHOULD be able to control SMTP ETRN.

  13) MUST be able to configure to provide different Return Codes
      for different rules (e.g. 451 Temp Fail vs 550 Fatal Error).

  The discussion below often ends up with a need to do various forms of
  pattern matching on domain/host names and IP addresses/subnets.  It
  is RECOMMENDED that the data/template for doing so may be supplied
  outside of the MTA, e.g. that the pattern matching rules be included
  in the MTA but that the actual patterns may be in an external file.
  It is also RECOMMENDED that the pattern matching rules (external
  file) may contain regular expressions, to give maximum flexibility.

  Of course string matching on domain/host names MUST NOT be case
  sensitive. Since <local-part> may be case sensitive it may be natural
  to keep that here. However, since <[email protected]> and
  <[email protected]> is most probably the same user and since the
  string compares are used to refuse his messages, we suggest that
  <local-part> comparisons be case insensitive too.

  The interpretation that should apply to all these recommendations is
  flexibility - regardless of how well we design anti-spam rules today,
  spammers will find ways around them and a well designed MTA should be
  flexible enough to meet those new threats.

2.1. Restricting unauthorized Mail Relay usage

  Unauthorized usage of a host as Mail Relay means theft of the relay's
  resources and puts the relay owner's reputation at risk. It also
  makes it impossible to filter out or block spam without at the same
  time blocking legitimate mail.

  Therefore, the MTA MUST be able to control/refuse such Relay usage.



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  In an SMTP session we have 4 elements, each with a varying degree of
  trust:

  1)  "HELO Hostname"           Easily and often forged.
  2)  "MAIL From:"              Easily and often forged.
  3)  "RCPT To:"                Correct, or at least intended.
  4)  SMTP_Caller (host)        IP.src addr OK, FQDN may be OK.

  Since 1) and 2) are so easily and often forged, we cannot depend on
  them at all to authorize usage of our host as Mail Relay.

  Instead, the MTA MUST be able to authorize Mail Relay usage based on
  a combination of:

  o   "RCPT To:" address (domain).
  o   SMTP_Caller FQDN hostname.
  o   SMTP_Caller IP address.

  The suggested algorithm is:

  a)  If "RCPT To:" is one of "our" domains, local or a domain that
      we accept to forward to (alternate MX), then accept to Relay.

  b)  If SMTP_Caller is authorized, either its IP.src or its FQDN
      (depending on if you trust the DNS), then accept to Relay.

  c)  Else refuse to Relay.

  When doing a) you have to make sure all kinds of SMTP source routing
  (both the official [@a,@b:u@c], the '%' hack and uucp-style '!' path)
  is either removed completely before the test, or at least is
  taken into account.

  A site implementing this requirement must also be aware that they
  might block correctly addressed messages, especially such originating
  or terminating in a gateway to a different mail system than SMTP.
  Before implementing such a policy, a careful inventory should be done
  to make sure all routing algorithms used, either by other mail
  systems or ad-hoc, are known. Each one of such systems must be taken
  care of on a case-by-case basis.

  Examples of such mail systems, and their addressing schemes are X.400
  with an address of the type:

      "/c=us/admd= /prmd=xyz/dd.rfc-822=user(a)final/"@x400-gateway

  Another example involves DECnet MAIL-11, which can have addresses in
  the form:



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      "gateway::smtp%\"user@final\""@mail-11-gateway

  In all cases the configuration MUST support wild cards for FQDNs and
  classful IP addresses and SHOULD support "address/mask" for classless
  IP addresses, e.g. domain.example and *.domain.example; 10.11.*.*,
  192.168.1.*, 192.168.2.*, 10.0.0.0/13, 192.168.1.0/23.

  The configuration SHOULD allow for the decision/template data to be
  supplied by an external source, e.g. text file or dbm database. The
  decision/template SHOULD be allowed to contain regular expressions.

2.2. Received: lines

  The MTA MUST prepend a "Received:" line in the mail (as described in
  RFC822, [2], and required in RFC1123, [3]). This "Received:" line
  MUST contain enough information to make it possible to trace the mail
  path back to the sender. We have two cases:

2.2.1. Direct MTA-to-MTA connections

  Internet mail was designed such that the sending host connects
  directly to the recipient as described by MX records (there may be
  several MX hosts on a priority list). To assure traceability back to
  the sending host (which may be a firewall/gateway, as described
  later) each MTA along the path, including the final MTA, MUST prepend
  a "Received:" line. For such a "Received:" line we have:

  It MUST contain:

  o   The IP address of the caller.

  o   The 'date-time' as described in RFC822, [2], pp 18.

  It SHOULD contain:

  o   The FQDN corresponding to the callers IP address.

  o   The argument given in the "HELO" statement.

  o   Authentication information, if an authenticated connection
      was used for the transmission / submission.

  It is suggested that most other "Received:" fields described in
  RFC822 be included in the "Received:" lines.

  Basically, any information that can help tracing the message can and
  should be added to the "Received:" line. It is true even when the
  initial submission is non-SMTP, for example submission via a web-based



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  mail client where http is used between the web client and server, a
  "Received:" line can be used to identify that connection stating what
  IP-address was used when connecting to the http server where the mail
  was created.

  These recommendations are deliberately stronger than RFC1123, [3],
  and are there to assure that mail sent directly from a spammer's host
  to a recipient can be traced with enough accuracy; a typical example
  is when a spammer uses a dialup account and the ISP needs to have his
  IP address at the 'date-time' to be able to take action against him.

2.2.2. Firewall/gateway type devices

  Organizations with a policy of hiding their internal network structure
  must still be allowed and able to do so. They usually make their
  internal MTAs prepend "Received:" lines with a very limited amount of
  information, or prepend none at all. Then they send out the mail
  through some kind of firewall/gateway device, which may even remove
  all the internal MTAs' "Received:" lines before it prepends its own
  "Received:" line (as required in RFC1123, [3]).

  By doing so they take on the full responsibility to trace spammers
  that send from inside their organization or they accept to be held
  responsible for those spammers' activities. It is REQUIRED that the
  information provided in their outgoing mail is sufficient for them to
  perform any necessary traces.

  In the case of incoming mail to an organization, the "Received:"
  lines MUST be kept intact to make sure that users receiving mail on
  the inside can give information needed to trace incoming messages to
  their origin.

  Generally, a gateway SHOULD NOT change or delete "Received:" lines
  unless it is a security requirement to do so. Changing the content
  of existing "Received:" lines to make sure they "make sense" when
  passing a mail gateway of some kind most often destroys and deletes
  information needed to make a message traceable. Care must be taken to
  preserve the information in "Received:" lines, either in the message
  itself, the mail that the receiver gets, or if that is impossible, in
  logfiles.

2.3. Event logs

  The MTA MUST be able to provide enough local log information to make
  it possible to trace the event. This includes most of the information
  put into the "Received:" lines; see above.





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2.4. Log anti-relay/anti-spam actions

  The MTA SHOULD be able to log all anti-relay/anti-spam actions. The
  log entries SHOULD contain at least:

  o   Time information.

  o   Refusal information, i.e. why the request was refused ("Mail
      From", "Relaying Denied", "Spam User", "Spam Host", etc).

  o   "RCPT To:" addresses (domains).
      (If the connection was disallowed at an earlier stage, e.g.
      by checking the SMTP_Caller IP address, the "RCPT To:"
      address is unknown and therefore cannot be logged).

  o   Offending host's IP address.

  o   Offending host's FQDN hostname.

  o   Other relevant information (e.g. given during the SMTP
      dialogue, before we decided to refuse the request).

  It should be noted that by logging more events, especially denied
  email, one opens the possibility for denial of service attacks, for
  example by filling logs by having a very large amount of "RCPT To:"
  commands. An implementation that implements increased logging
  according to this description must be aware of the fact that the size
  of the logfiles increases, especially during attacks.

2.5. Refuse mail based on SMTP_Caller address

  The MTA SHOULD be able to accept or refuse mail from a specific host
  or from a group of hosts. Here we mean the IP.src address or the FQDN
  that its .IN-ADDR.ARPA resolves to (depending on whether you trust
  the DNS). This functionality could be implemented at a firewall, but
  since the MTA should be able to "defend itself" we recommend it be able
  to as well.

  It is RECOMMENDED that the MTA be able to decide based on FQDN hostnames
  (host.domain.example), on wild card domain names (*.domain.example),
  on individual IP addresses (10.11.12.13) or on IP addresses with a
  prefix length (10.0.0.0/8, 192.168.1.0/24).

  It is also RECOMMENDED that these decision rules can be combined to
  form a flexible list of accept/refuse/accept/refuse, e.g:






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      accept   host.domain.example
      refuse   *.domain.example
      accept   10.11.12.13
      accept   192.168.1.0/24
      refuse   10.0.0.0/8

  The list is searched until first match and the accept/refuse action
  is based on that.

  IP-address/length is RECOMMENDED. However, implementations with wild
  cards, e.g. 10.11.12.* (classful networks on byte boundaries only)
  are of course much better than those without.

  To improve filtering even more, the MTA MAY provide complete regular
  expressions to be used for hostnames; possibly also for IP addresses.

2.6. "MAIL From: <>" and "MAIL From: <[email protected]>"

  Although the fight against spammers is important it must never be
  done in a way that violates existing email standards. Since spammers
  often forge "MAIL From:" addresses it is tempting to put general
  restrictions on that, especially for some "obvious" addresses. This
  may, however, wreak more havoc to the mail community than spam does.

  When there is a need to refuse mail from a particular host or site
  our recommendation is to use other methods mentioned in this memo,
  e.g. refuse mail based on SMTP_Caller address (or name), regardless
  of what "MAIL From:" was used.

2.6.1. "MAIL From: <>"

  The MTA MUST NOT refuse to receive "MAIL From: <>".

  The "MAIL From: <>" address is used in error messages from the mail
  system itself, e.g. when a legitimate mail relay is used and forwards
  an error message back to the user. Refusing to receive such mail
  means that users may not be notified of errors in their outgong mail,
  e.g.  "User unknown", which will no doubt wreak more havoc to the
  mail community than spam does.

  The most common case of such legitimate "MAIL From: <>" is to one
  recipient, i.e. an error message returned to one single individual.
  Since spammers have used "MAIL From: <>" to send to many recipients,
  it is tempting to either reject such mail completely or to reject all
  but the first recipient. However, there are legitimate causes for an
  error mail to go to multiple recipients, e.g. a list with several
  list owners, all located at the same remote site, and thus the MTA
  MUST NOT refuse "MAIL From: <>" even in this case.



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  However, the MTA MAY throttle down the TCP connection ("read()"
  frequency) if there are more than one "RCPT To:" and that way slow
  down spammers using "MAIL From: <>".

2.6.2. "MAIL From: <[email protected]>"

  The MTA MUST NOT refuse "MAIL From: <[email protected]>".

  By "my.local.dom.ain" we mean the domain name(s) that are treated as
  local and result in local delivery. At first thought it may seem like
  noone else will need to use "MAIL From: <[email protected]>" and
  that restrictions on who may use that would reduce the risk of fraud
  and thus reduce spam. While this may be true in the (very) short
  term, it also does away with at least two legitimate usages:

  o   Aliases (.forward files).
      <[email protected]> sends to <[email protected]> and
      that mail gets forwarded back to <[email protected]>, e.g.
      since <user2> has moved to my.local.dom.ain and has a .forward
      file at external.example.

  o   Mailing lists.
      RFC1123, [3], gives a clear requirement that "MAIL From:" for
      mail from a mailing list should reflect the owner of the list,
      rather than the individual sender. Because of this fact, and the
      fact that the owner of the list might not be in the same domain
      as the list (list host) itself, mail may arrive to the list
      owner's domain (mail host) from a foreign domain (from a host
      serving a foreign domain) with the list owner's local domain in
      the "Mail From:" command.

  If "MAIL From: <[email protected]>" is rejected, both these cases
  will result in failure to deliver legitimate mail.

2.7. Refuse based on "MAIL From:"

  The MTA SHOULD be able to refuse to receive mail from a specific
  "MAIL From:" user ([email protected]) or from an entire "MAIL From:"
  domain (domain.example). In general these kinds of rules are easily
  overcome by the spammers changing "MAIL From:" every so often, but
  the ability to block a certain user or a certain domain is quite
  helpful while an attack has just been discovered and is ongoing.

  Please note that

      "MAIL From: <>"
  and
      "MAIL From: <[email protected]>"



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  MUST NOT be refused (see above), except when other policies block the
  connection, for example when the SMTP_Caller IP address of the peer
  belongs to a network which is deliberately refused.

2.8. Rate Control

  The MTA SHOULD provide tools for the mail host to control the rate
  with which mail is sent or received. The idea is twofold:

  1)  If we happen to have an legitimate mail user with an existing
      legitimate account and this user sends out spam, we may want to
      reduce the speed with which he sends it out. This is not without
      controversy and must be used with extreme care, but it may
      protect the rest of the Internet from him.

  2)  If we are under a spam attack it may help us considerably just
      being able to slow down the incoming mail rate for that
      particular user/host.

  For sending mail, this has to be done by throttling the TCP
  connection to set the acceptable output data rate, e.g. reduce the
  "write()" frequency.

  For receiving mail, we could use basically the same technique, e.g.
  reduce the "read()" frequency, or we could signal with a 4xx Return
  Code that we cannot receive. It is RECOMMENDED that the decision to
  take such action be based on "MAIL From:" user, "MAIL From:" domain,
  SMTP_Caller (name/address), "RCPT TO:", or a combination of all
  these.

2.9. Verify "MAIL From:"

  The MTA SHOULD be able to perform a simple "sanity check" of the
  "MAIL From:" domain and refuse to receive mail if that domain is
  nonexistent (i.e. does not resolve to having an MX or an A record).
  If the DNS error is temporary, TempFail, the MTA MUST return a 4xx
  Return Code (Temporary Error). If the DNS error is an Authoritative
  NXdomain (host/domain unknown) the MTA SHOULD still return a 4xx
  Return Code (since this may just be primary and secondary DNS not
  being in sync) but it MAY allow for an 5xx Return Code (as configured
  by the sysadmin).

2.10. Verify <local-part>

  The MTA SHOULD allow outgoing mail to have its <local-part> verified
  so that the sender name is a real user or an existing alias. This is
  basically to protect the rest of the Internet from various "typos"




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      MAIL From: <[email protected]>

  and/or malicious users

      MAIL From: <[email protected]>

  As always this can be overcome by spammers really wanting to do so,
  but with more strict rules for relaying it becomes harder and harder.
  In fact, catching "typos" at the initial (and official) mail relay is
  in itself enough motivation for this recommendation.

2.11. SMTP VRFY and EXPN

  Both SMTP VRFY and EXPN provide means for a potential spammer to test
  whether the addresses on his list are valid (VRFY) and even get more
  addresses (EXPN). Therefore, the MTA SHOULD control who is is allowed
  to issue these commands. This may be "on/off" or it may use access
  lists similar to those mentioned previously.

  Note that the "VRFY" command is required according to RFC821, [1].
  The response can, though, be "252 Argument not checked" to represent
  "off" or blocked via an access list. This should be the default.

  Default for the "EXPN" command should be "off".

2.12. SMTP ETRN

  SMTP ETRN means that the MTA will re-run its mail queue, which may be
  quite costly and open for Denial of Service attacks. Therefore, the
  MTA SHOULD control who is is allowed to issue the ETRN command.  This
  may be "on/off" or it may use access lists similar to those mentioned
  previously. Default should be "off".

2.13. Return Codes

  The primary issue here is flexibility - it is simply not possible to
  define in a document how to make tradeoffs between returning 5xx and
  make legitimate mail fail at once due to a configuration mistake and
  returning 4xx and be able to catch such configuration mistakes via
  log file inspection.

  Therefore, the MTA MUST be configurable to provide "Success" (2xx),
  "Temporary Failure" (4xx) or "Permanent Failure" (5xx) for different
  rules or policies. The exact return codes, other than the first digit
  (2, 4 or 5) should, however, not be configurable.  This is because of
  the ease of configuring the software in the wrong way, and the fact





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  that the selection of exactly what error code to use is very subtle
  and that many software implementations do check more than the first
  digit (2, 4 or 5) in the return code.

  However, when the response is the result of a DNS lookup and the DNS
  system returned TempFail, a temporary error, the MTA MUST reflect
  this and provide a 4xx return code. If the DNS response is an
  Authoritative NXdomain (host or domain unknown) the MTA MAY reflect
  this by a 5xx Return Code.

  Please refer to the previous discussion on SMTP Return Codes for
  additional information.

2.13.1. The importance of flexibility - an example

  At Chalmers University of Technology our DNS contains

      cdg.chalmers.se.  IN  MX    0   mail.cdg.chalmers.se.
                        IN  MX  100   mail.chalmers.se.

  and similarly for most subdomains, i.e. a second host to store mail
  to each subdomain, should their mail host be down. This means that
  mail.chalmers.se must be prepared to act as Mail Relay for the
  subdomains ("RCPT To:") it serves and that those subdomains' mail
  hosts have to accept SMTP connections from mail.chalmers.se. Late
  versions of spam software make use of this fact by always using
  mail.chalmers.se to get their mail delivered to our subdomains and by
  doing so they still get Mail Relaying done for them and they prevent
  recipient hosts from refusing SMTP connections based on the sending
  host's FQDN or IP-address.

  As long as we keep our design with a secondary MX host we cannot
  really have mail.chalmers.se refuse Mail Relay, at least not with a
  5xx return code. However, it has been fairly straight forward to
  identify the hosts/domains/networks that make use of this possibility
  and refuse to act as Mail Relay for them them - and only them - and
  do so with a 4xx return code. Legitimate mail from them may be
  delayed if the final recipient host is down but will eventually be
  delivered when it gets up again (4xx Return Code) and this is no
  worse then if we changed our MX design. Spam now faces a "Denied"
  response and have to connect to each and every one of the recipients,
  who may decide to refuse the SMTP connection.

  The bottom line is that this is made possible because of 1) enough
  flexibility in the Relay Authorization code and 2) enough flexibility
  in assigning Return Codes - an MTA with a 5xx Return Code carved in
  stone would have made this absolutely impossible.




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3. Future work

3.1. Impact on SMTP UAs and end users

  Even though this memo is about MTAs and recommendations for them,
  some of what is done here also impacts UAs (User Agents, the
  "ordinary mail programs").

  A UA does two things:

  1)  Reads mail from a mailbox and prints on the screen.
      This typically uses a protocol like POP, IMAP or NFS.

  2)  Reads text from the keyboard and hands that over to the mailbox
      MTA for delivery as a piece of mail. This typically uses the SMTP
      protocol, i.e. the same protocol that is used between MTAs.

  When MTAs now start to implement various anti-relay filters as
  described above, a UA on a portable laptop host may get a response
  like "Relaying Denied" just because it happens to use IP addresses
  within an unknown range or that resolve to unknown FQDNs.

  The typical victim of this "Relaying Denied" response is a salesman
  carrying a laptop on a business trip, or even an IETF delegate at a
  meeting hotel. The salesman will probably dial his nearest ISP and
  will get an IP address from that dialup pool; the IETF delegate will
  use an IP address from the terminal room. In both cases their laptop
  mail program (the UA; e.g. pine, Netscape, Eudora) will try to send
  out mail via their home MTA, e.g. SMTP-SERVER=mail.home.example, but
  unless mail.home.example has been updated to accept that (temporary)
  IP address it will respond "Relaying Denied" and refuse.

  To get around this problem we could simply add the terminal room's or
  the dialup pool's IP network to the list of accepted networks at
  mail.home.example. This does open up some minimal risk of spammers
  using that host as their Mail Relay: If they use the same ISP's
  dialup pool and they configure to use mail.home.example at the same
  time as our salesman is on his trip, then the spammers will be
  authorized to relay their spam through mail.home.example. However,
  this is not extremely likely and as long as we do not open up for the
  entire world all the time and we keep the log files under close
  observation and we stop relaying at once we find we're being used,
  this solution is probably good enough.

  Another way around is that our salesman uses a Mail Relay provided by
  the current dialup ISP, if that service exists. To do so he has to
  modify SMTP-SERVER= in his UA, which may or may not be reasonable.




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  The correct way to handle this situation, though, is by some other
  mail-sending protocol between the UA and the MTA.

  Although a separate submission protocol does not exist, a profile of
  SMTP for this, the "Message Submission" specification, [9], has
  recently been defined.

  Or, we could note that when the SMTP Authentication work, [10], is
  all in place, it will allow for Authenticated SMTP to serve as The
  Protocol between the UAs and the home MTA (whether that should be
  considered a new protocol or "the same old SMTP" is irrelevant here).

  This adds one item to the suggested Relay algorithm in section 2.1:

  +   If "SMTP Authenticated" then accept to Relay.

3.2. Personal anti-spam filters

  Since all users are individuals, there is little hope that any
  central anti-spam action will suit them all - in fact people can and
  do argue about Freedom of Speech infringement if some central set of
  anti-spam rules is enforced without the users' approval. (One could
  of course also argue whether spam really adds anything to anyone, but
  that must be up to each individual user to decide, rather than being
  centrally decided).

  Therefore the only reasonable extension is to allow for personal
  anti-spam filters, i.e. anti-spam filters like the ones described
  earlier in this memo, but available and configurable on a per user
  basis. Since most users will not have a strong opinion (except that
  they want to avoid spam) the mail system should provide a system
  default and give each user the ability to override or modify that.
  In a UNIX based environment one could have something like

      /etc/mail/rc.spam
      ~/.spamrc

  and rules on how the latter can interfere with the former.

  All of this opens up quite a number of unresolved issues, e.g.
  whether each user himself really should be allowed to decide on SMTP
  Return Codes (and how it should be described so he understands enough
  of the implications) and how existing mail systems will deal with
  different per user responses, especially how they will deal with a
  mix of 5xx and 4xx codes:

      C  MAIL From: <[email protected]>
      S  250 <[email protected]>... Sender ok



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      C  RCPT To: <[email protected]>
      S  250 <[email protected]>... Recipient ok
      C  RCPT To: <[email protected]>
      S  451 <[email protected]>... Denied due to spam list
      C  RCPT To: <[email protected]>
      S  550 <[email protected]>... Denied due to spam list

  Of course one could decide on either "250 OK" or "550 Denied" with no
  other alternatives for the individual user, but this too has to be
  explained enough that an ordinary user understands the implications
  of "Refuse 'MAIL From: <.*@spam.example>'" and that it can do away
  with, or block out, mail he actually wanted.

3.3. SMTP Authentication

  SMTP Authentication, [10], has already been mentioned as a method to
  authorize Mail Relaying, but of course there is much more to it than
  that. When that infrastructure and functionality is all in place,
  spammers will have a much harder time forging addresses and hiding.

3.4. Spam and NATs

  With the increased use of Network Address Translators (NATs) may come
  a need for additional information in log files. As long as there is a
  1:1 mapping between the addresses inside the NAT and the addresses
  used outside it everything is OK, but if the NAT box also translates
  port numbers (to combine many internal hosts into one external
  address) we will need to log not only the IP addresses of spam hosts
  but also the port numbers. Otherwise we will not be able to identify
  the individual host inside the NAT.

4. Security Considerations

  The grassfire-like increase of spam raises several security issues
  which, in fact, puts the entire Internet mail community at risk:

  o   People may fail to find important mail in their flooded
      mailboxes. Or, they may delete it while cleaning up.

  o   ISPs get overloaded mailbox hosts and filled disk. Cleaning up
      and helping customers requires a lot of human resources.  In
      fact, ISP mail servers have crashed by too much mail.

  o   While disks are unaccessible, either due to being filled or due
      to "mail quota", important mail may be delayed or lost.  Normally
      this would not happen without notice, but if both the sender and





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      receiver hosts have their disk flooded, the mail being returned
      may also fail, i.e. the email service may become less trustworthy
      than before.

  o   Hosts used as unauthorized Mail Relays become overloaded.
      Besides the technical implications, this too requires a lot of
      human resources, cleaning up mail queues and taking care of
      furious external users that were spammed through the Relay.

  o   The fight against spammers includes blocking their hosts (which
      is described in this memo). However, there is a great risk that
      Mail Relay hosts may be blocked too, even though they are also
      victims. In the long run, this may cause Internet mail service to
      deteriorate.

  o   The common use of forged "MAIL From:" and "From:" addresses puts
      the blame on innocent persons/hosts/organizations. This is bad
      for reputations and may affect business relations.

  Several of the methods described in this document increases the load
  on several support systems to the email system itself. Those support
  systems can be DNS, logging, databases with lists of local users,
  authentication mechanisms and others. Implementing the methods
  described in this document will, because of that, increase the risk
  of a denial of service attack against the support system by sending
  spam to a site. Logging facilities must for example be able to handle
  more logging (what happens when the logfiles fills the disk?).  DNS
  servers and authentication mechanisms must be able to stand the load
  of more lookups etc.

  The functionality of the support systems during high load should be
  carefully studied before implementing the methods described in this
  document.

  The mail system should be carefully studied, e.g. how it behaves when
  one or more of the support systems needed for a specific method
  fails. A mail server MUST NOT respond with "Permanent Failure" (5xx)
  if there is a temporary problem with one of its support systems.

5. Acknowledgements

  This memo is the result of discussions in an ad hoc group of Swedish
  ISPs and Universities. Without any hope on mentioning everyone we
  simply give the domain names here: algonet.se, global-ip.net, pi.se,
  swip.net, telia.net, udac.se; chalmers.se, sunet.se, umu.se, and
  uu.se.





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  We want to acknowledge valuable input and suggestions from Andras
  Salamon, John Myers, Bob Flandrena, Dave Presotto, Dave Kristol,
  Donald Eastlake, Ned Freed, Keith Moore and Paul Hoffman.

  Finally many thanks to Harald Alvestrand and Patrik Faltstrom, both
  for useful comments and for their support and guidance through the
  IETF process.

6. References

  [1] Postel, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", STD 10, RFC 821,
      August 1982.

  [2] Crocker, D., "Standard for the format of ARPA Internet text
      messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.

  [3] Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet hosts - application and
      support", STD 3, RFC 1123, October 1989.

  [4] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
      Level", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [5] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Concepts and Facilities", STD
      13, RFC 1034, November 1987.

  [6] Mockapetris, P., "Domain Names - Implementation and
      Specifications", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.

  [7] Eastlake, D. and C. Kaufman, "Domain Name System Security
      Extensions", RFC 2065, January 1997.

  [8] sendmail Home Page. http://www.sendmail.org

  [9] Gellens, R. and J. Klensin "Message Submission", RFC 2476,
      September 1998.

  [10] Myers, J., "SMTP Service Extension for Authentication", Work in
      Progress.

  *   Spam (R) (capitalized) is a registered trademark of a meat
      product made by Hormel. Use of the term spam (uncapitalized) in
      the Internet community comes from a Monty Python sketch and is
      almost Internet folklore. The term spam is usually pejorative,
      however this is not in any way intended to describe the Hormel
      product.






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Editor's Address

  Gunnar Lindberg
  Computer Communications Group
  Chalmers University of Technology
  SE-412 96 Gothenburg, SWEDEN,

  Phone: +46 31 772 5913
  FAX:   +46 31 772 5922
  EMail: [email protected]









































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Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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