Hello Malcom,

 

Thank you for your clarification.

The complete answer will be part of the RIPE NCC impact analysis and will refer to this Registry's understanding.

 

Before that, we can give some preliminary remarks, in phase with RIPE NCC discussions.

 

As we stated in your last answer with Grégory, a gradual approach will be implemented, in a flexible manner with dialogue as a priority. The validation or invalidation of the "abuse-mailbox" will be studied carefully.

 

With regard to your first scenario, the auto-answer you mention can be considered as a valid reply, and the "support service" would help to proceed with the abuse report.

Your scenario 2 is a little more questionable. A first question would be: which provider would do the effort to treat RIPE NCC emails different than normal abuse reports ? Besides that, this fact would show that the abuse contact is technically reachable.

And furthermore, if other abuse reports are bounced by the provider, RIPE NCC report can be used for investigation.

 

Regards

 

Hervé and Greg

 

 

-----Message d'origine-----
De : anti-abuse-wg [mailto:anti-abuse-wg-bounces@ripe.net] De la part de Malcolm Hutty
Envoyé : lundi 25 septembre 2017 11:55
À : anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net
Objet : [anti-abuse-wg] 2017-02: what does it achieve?

 

 

I would like to clarify the effect of this proposal.

 

The proposal states:

"The RIPE NCC will validate the “abuse-mailbox:” attribute at least annually. If no valid reply is received by RIPE NCC within two weeks (including if the email bounces back), the “abuse-mailbox:” contact attribute will be marked as invalid."

 

 

Scenario 1: An LIR directs e-mail sent to their abuse-cc: address to an auto-responder that says "This mailbox is not monitored by a human being", and advises on alternate "support services" (e.g. a FAQ, a webform that feeds a ticketing system etc). Is RIPE NCC intended to mark the attribute as invalid in this scenario?

 

Scenario 2: An LIR filters incoming e-mail sent to their abuse-cc:

address. Email from RIPE NCC gets "priority treatment", i.e. is directed to someone who passes a Turing test administered by the NCC. E-mail from anyone else gets the same treatment as in scenario 1.

 

Is Scenario 2 compliant with the policy? If not, how is RIPE NCC supposed to know to mark the attribute as invalid? What tests are the NCC supposed to administer? And what must an LIR do to pass them?

 

Malcolm.

 

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