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Spamhaus

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 03 April 2013 | 00.55

The Spamhaus Project is an international organization, based in both London and Geneva, founded in 1998 by Steve Linford to track email spammers and spam-related activity. The name spamhaus, a pseudo-German expression, was coined by Linford for an Internet service provider, or other firm, which spams or willingly provides service to spammers. Spamhaus is responsible for a number of very widely used anti-spam DNS-based Blocklists (DNSBLs) and Whitelists (DNSWLs). 




Many internet service providers and email servers use the lists to reduce the amount of spam they accept. The Spamhaus lists collectively protect over 1.77 billion email users, according to Spamhaus' web page (in November 2012) and are estimated to block 80 billion spam emails per day globally on the internet (almost one million per second). Like all DNSBLs, their use is considered controversial by some.
The Spamhaus Block List (SBL) targets "verified spam sources (including spammers, spam gangs and spam support services)." Its goal is to list IP addresses belonging to known spammers, spam operations, and spam-support services. The SBL's listings are partially based on the ROKSO index of known spammers.

The Exploits Block List (XBL) targets "illegal 3rd party exploits, including open proxies, worms/viruses with built-in spam engines, virus-infected PCs & servers and other types of trojan-horse exploits." That is to say it is a list of known open proxies and exploited computers being used to send spam and viruses. The XBL includes information gathered by Spamhaus as well as by other contributing DNSBL operations such as the Composite Blocking List (CBL).
The Policy Block List (PBL)  is similar to a Dialup Users List. The PBL lists not only dynamic IP addresses designated as 'not allowed to make direct SMTP connections', but also static addresses that shouldn't be sending email without prior arrangement. Examples of such are an ISP's core routers, corporate users required by policy to send their email via company servers, and unassigned IP addresses. Much of the data is provided to Spamhaus by the organizations that control the IP address space, typically ISPs.
The Domain Block List (DBL) was released in March 2010 and is a list of domain names, which is both a domain URI Blocklist and RHSBL. It lists spam domains including spam payload URLs, spam sources and senders ("right-hand side"), known spammers and spam gangs, and phish, virus and malware-related sites. It later added a zone of "abused URL shortners", a common way spammers insert links into spam emails.
The Spamhaus White List (SWL) was released in October 2010 and is a whitelist of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. The SWL is intended to allow mail servers to separate incoming email traffic into 3 categories: Good, Bad and Unknown. Only verified legitimate senders with clean reputations are approved for whitelisting and there are strict terms to keeping a Spamhaus Whitelist account.
The Domain White List (DWL) was released in October 2010 and is a whitelist of domain names. The DWL enables automatic certification of domains with DKIM signatures. Only verified legitimate senders with clean reputations are approved for whitelisting and there are strict terms to keeping a whitelist account. Spamhaus's DNSBLs and DNSWLs are offered as a free public service to low-volume mail server operators on the Internet. Commercial spam filtering services and other large sites doing large numbers of queries must instead sign up for an rsync-based feed of these DNSBLs, which Spamhaus calls its Datafeed Service, at a moderate fee as long as they are not in Spamhaus's top ten worst spam service ISPs list. Spamhaus also provides two combined DNSBLs. One is the SBL+XBL[11] which allows users to query sbl-xbl.spamhaus.org once and get return codes from both lists. A newer combination is called ZEN[12] (named after founder Linford's dog), which allows users to query zen.spamhaus.org once and get return codes from the SBL+XBL and the newer PBL.
Spamhaus outlines the way its DNSBL technology works in a document called Understanding DNSBL Filtering.

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Mxit Review and Download

Mxit (pronounced "mix it") is a free instant messaging application developed by Mxit Lifestyle (Pty) Ltd. in South Africa that runs on multiple mobile and computing platforms. Along with its own standard protocol, it can connect to Yahoo, ICQ, Google Talk, Facebook, AIM, or Windows Live Messenger contacts as well. According to a 2011 study by consultancy World Wide Worx, Mxit currently has about 10 million active subscribers, making it the largest mobile social network in Africa.



Mxit have many feature, Mxit allows users to send and receive one-on-one text and multimedia messages to and from other users, and in general chat rooms. MXit also supports gateways to other instant messaging platforms such as MSN Messenger, ICQ and Google Talk. MXit does not charge for one-on-one messages though mobile operators may charge for data usage. There are also a number of pay-services, including chatrooms. Mxit was first released as a mobile phone IM client. Available on a variety of phones, Mxit requires Java and internet connectivity via CSD, GPRS, 3G or wifi to run. Tailored versions have also been released for the Apple iPhone (via the iTunes App Store), Android, BlackBerry OS and Windows Mobile devices.

MXit Lifestyle have also released a Windows client, MXit EVO PC. Mxit features some of the standard functions of a modern instant messaging client, such as a contact list, file transfers and photo sharing via a cellphone's built-in camera. MXit also supports profile photos, tabbed conversations and message formatting. Contacts are added by entering their cellphone number and, as of recently, a username. Users are able to change their presence and mood via a menu on the client. Further features include support for themes, emoticons, and group chat, called MultiMX. 

On 1 April 2009, Mxit released an open-source plug-in for the libPurple library. This allows applications using the libPurple library such as Pidgin and Adium to connect to the Mxit network. This coincided with the release of the MXit Developer Zone web-site and documentation on the Mxit client protocol. Mxit has been included as a standard protocol in Pidgin since version 2.6.4. 

Mxit support Platform :
MXit is available on a variety of mobile and Computing platforms, each independently developed for the platform. These are:
   > Android                             > Linux using Pidgin
   > BlackBerry OS                  > Mac OS X using Adium
   > iOS                                    > Microsoft Windows using Pidgin and MXit EVO
   > Java ME                            > Windows Phone 7
   > Windows Mobile

If you want to download Mxit, klik This Download Button,,:

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