Optus pleads for help ... from Telstra

When e-mail from Optus customers started getting blocked by other Internet service providers last week, the company turned to its biggest rival for assistance.

Optus realised it had been placed on a global 'blacklist' of spammers commonly used by ISPs to block unsolicited bulk e-mail from reaching customers.

An Optus spokesperson told ZDNet Australia  it became aware of the problem last week and has been looking for a fix since. The company believes the spam list inclusion was a mistake.

According to a Telstra BigPond spokesperson, Optus was having difficulty staying off the blacklist and had approached Telstra for technical assistance in resolving the issue.

"Our spam experts are talking to their technical people to give them advice on what Optus can do to get off the blacklist.

"Telstra has the Spam National Operations Centre, which is a team of experts in spam, so we'll be lending them the resources to sort it all out," said the BigPond spokesperson. Due to the spam blacklist, BigPond has blocked e-mail from Optus.

Telstra was just being a good neighbour, the spokesperson added. Fixing the problem would also mean Optus customers will be able to send and receive e-mail to BigPond addressess.

Optus did not indicate when its e-mail service would return to normal.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Could ZDnet employ someone who ...Anonymous -- 11/07/05

    Could ZDnet employ someone who actually knows what they're on about?
    Telstra subscribe to an RBL service that wrongly included the IP range that Optusnet's (not Optus, as they're a telephone company) SMTP servers sit on.
    The problem here was not that Optus needed help... it is that Telstra blindly block SMTP servers by IP address when supplied by an unreliable source., and I might add were hard pressed to find someone who knew the phrase 'whitelist', let alone knew how to implement one.

    Re: Could ZDNET employ someone ...Anonymous -- 11/07/05

    Re: Could ZDNET employ someone who knows.....

    fair go! I think we all know the ISP in question when "optus" is mentioned in the article. Optus and Optusnet are used interchangeably amongst staff and business partners and they seem to know who they are talking about. This isnt an issue of Journalistic knowledge. The article adequately explains the overall issue. It's readers like you that...... confuse Telstra with Bigpond....

    I support the aspersion cast upon Telstra for the lack of a whitelist, however, the core issue is that Optus(net) are on a global (not just Telstra) blacklist and have asked for some help to get off the blacklist. The sub issues are that of the reliability of black lists and and the effect that getting it wrong can have on large numbers of people. Oh and dont forget to question whether Teltra really is being a good neighbour when you weigh it up that they are lending resources but lacking the use of a whitelist.

    This is a news issue on Optus because of the global RBL listing - Not a Bigpond issue or an excuse to bash bigpond.

    Renai LeMai, I'd hire you if I ever needed a journalist.

    Optusnet would need 'assistanc ...Anonymous -- 13/07/05

    Optusnet would need 'assistance' getting off an RBL because the blacklist is maintained by a third party.

    That there would be complications in a major ISP (with significant spam protection in place) having servers taken off a blacklist is more indicative of poor implementation and administration of the list itself than the ISP.

    As to the 'good neighbor', Telstra would no doubt be getting complaints themselves from their users, who can't receive email from Optusnet users due to a poorly run RBL.

    "This is a news issue on Optus because of the global RBL listing - Not a Bigpond issue or an excuse to bash bigpond."

    Well, if Bigpond is the only ISP Optusnet are having issues with, then perhaps there is something at Bigpond that also needs addressing.

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