News
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SURBL exhibiting at RSA Conference 2011
02/02/2011
SURBL will be exhibiting at RSA Conference 2011 in San Francisco, CA from February 14 through 18 with our reseller MXTools at booth 1159. Please stop by and say hi if you use SURBL data. We'd ...read more
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Updated TLD Lists
02/25/2010
We have created a three-level-tld list that contains domains that should be checked at the fourth level. It joins the existing list of two-level-tld domains that should be checked at the third ...read more
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Most Abused TLD's Announced
11/02/2009
SURBL has added a report of Most Abused TLDs. This is a daily count of the TLDs most commonly appearing in SURBL data and is an indication of relative abuse levels. The TLD .cn is ...read more
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Updated Malware Domain List
10/09/2009
As of October 2009, data from Malware Domain List has been added to the ph list. ...read more
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PH List now includes ZeuS Tracker
06/27/2009
As of 27 June 2009, the PH list includes ZeuS Tracker malware host data. ...read more
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NS records removed from SURBL zone files
06/22/2009
As of 22 June 2009, NS records have been removed from the SURBL zone files. This should not affect operators of either public or private DNS mirrors, since the records are not needed in either ...read more
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Public DNS disabled
03/01/2009
As of 1 March 2009, public DNS of individual lists such as sc.surbl.org is disabled. Please use multi.surbl.org instead. multi includes all of the individual lists, so the individual lists are ...read more
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SURBL rsync access is moving to a Sponsored Data Service
10/01/2008
SURBL rsync access is moving to a Sponsored Data Service in order to keep the project operating and improving. Public DNS service for small to medium sized organizations with fewer than 1,000 ...read more
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Addtional data sources added
08/01/2008
ws.surbl.org now has some additional data sources including: MailSecurity's SURBL ...read more
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SURBL phising list now contains malware site data
04/06/2008
The SURBL phishing list now includes malware site data from ...read more
SURBL Data Feed Request
SURBL Data Feeds offer higher performance for professional users through faster updates and resulting fresher data. Freshness matters since the threat behavior is often highly dynamic, so Data Feed users can expect higher detection rates and lower false negatives.
Data feeds are available in three formats:
Rsync and DNS are typically used for mail filtering and RPZ for web filtering. High-volume systems and non-filter uses such as security research should use rsync.
For more information, please contact your SURBL reseller or see the references in Links.
Sign up for SURBL Data Feed Access.
Sign up for data feed access
Direct data feed access offers better filtering performance with fresher data than is available on the public mirrors. Sign up for SURBL Data Feed Access.
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