marf | K. Li |
Internet-Draft | B. Leiba |
Intended status: Standards Track | Huawei Technologies |
Expires: November 14, 2011 | May 13, 2011 |
Email Feedback Report Type Value : not-spam
draft-li-marf-not-spam-feedback-00
This document defines a new Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) feedback report type value: "not-spam". It can be used to indicate that a message that was tagged or categorized as spam (such as by an ISP) in fact is not spam.
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In [RFC5965], an Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) is defined for reporting email abuse. Currently two feedback report types are defined that are related to the spam problem, and that can be used to report abusive or fraudulent email messages:
This specification defines a new feedback report type: "not-spam". It can be used to report a message that was mistakenly marked as spam.
The requirement to indicate a not-spam report type is from the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) Spam Report Requirement Document [OMA-SpamRep-RD].
In some cases, the mail client receives an email message that was tagged as spam, either by the mail system or accidentally by the user, but the end user finds out that actually it is not spam. The mail client accepts the end user's report instruction and retrieves information related to the message, and reports this email as not-spam to the mail operator. When the mail operator receives the report, it can take appropriate measures with the mail in the message store. For example, it can remove the spam tag or change the category, possibly preventing future similar mail from being marked as spam. The report can be used to adjust the training of an automated classifier. After processing the report, the mail operator can send a notification to the mail client about the processing result.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. These terms take their normative values only when presented in UPPER CASE.
This document only defines a new feedback report type, "not-spam", extending feedback reports as specified in [RFC5965].
In the first MIME part of the feedback report message, the end user or the mail client MAY add information to indicate why the message is not spam -- for example, because the originator or its domain is well known.
In the example, Joe, a pharmaceuticals sales representative, has received a message about discount pharmaceuticals. Because that is a frequent subject of spam email, the message has been marked as spam -- incorrectly, in this case. Joe has reported it as "not-spam", and this is an example of the report.
From: <abusedesk@example.com> Date: Thu, 8 Mar 2005 17:40:36 EDT Subject: FW: Discount on pharmaceuticals To: <abuse@example.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/report; report-type=feedback-report; boundary="part1_13d.2e68ed54_boundary" --part1_13d.2e68ed54_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit This is an email abuse report for an email message received from IP 192.0.2.1 on Thu, 8 Mar 2005 14:00:00 EDT. For more information about this format please see http://www.mipassoc.org/arf/. --part1_13d.2e68ed54_boundary Content-Type: message/feedback-report Feedback-Type: not-spam User-Agent: SomeGenerator/1.0 Version: 1 --part1_13d.2e68ed54_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Received: from mailserver.example.net (mailserver.example.net [192.0.2.1]) by example.com with ESMTP id M63d4137594e46; Thu, 08 Mar 2005 14:00:00 -0400 From: <someone@example.net> To: <Undisclosed Recipients> Subject: Discount on pharmaceuticals MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-type: text/plain Message-ID: 8787KJKJ3K4J3K4J3K4J3.mail@example.net Date: Thu, 02 Sep 2004 12:31:03 -0500 Hi, Joe. I got a lead on a source for discounts on pharmaceuticals, and I thought you might be interested. [...etc...] --part1_13d.2e68ed54_boundary-- Example 1: Not-spam report
All of the Security Considerations from [RFC5965] are inherited here.
Not-spam reports could possibly be used in an attack on a filtering system, reporting true spam as "not-spam". Even in absence of malice, some not-spam reports will only apply to the user sending the report. Operators need to be careful in trusting such reports, beyond their applicability to the specific user in question.
Registration is requested for the newly defined feedback type name: "not-spam", according to the instructions in section 7.3 of the base specification [RFC5965].
Please add the following to the "Feedback Report Type Values" registry:
The authors would like thank Murray S. Kucherawy and Bert Greevenbosch for their discussion and review.
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |
[RFC5965] | Shafranovich, Y., Levine, J. and M. Kucherawy, "An Extensible Format for Email Feedback Reports", RFC 5965, August 2010. |
[OMA-SpamRep-RD] | Open Mobile Alliance, "Mobile Spam Reporting Requirements", OMA-RD-SpamRep-V1_0 20101123-C, November 2010. |