So... my once-a-month posts OCD issue went unsatisfied for the past 2 months. Oh well. Back to business...
Sender Policy Framework (SPF) records are often used as one method of combatting spam; specifically, spam that wants to look like it has been sent by your company. The general idea is that your SPF records specify which hosts and IP addresses are allowed to send email using your domain(s) in the envelope 'from' address. Any other host, which is not contained within the SPF policies, that attempts to send mail from your domain will fail the SPF check and, hopefully, get picked up by some kind of spam detection software further down the track. It is highly recommended that you setup SPF records for any domains that you own.
How are SPF records requested? Via DNS. They are usually contained within the TXT record, however they can also, occasionally, be found in the SPF record aswell. The format is very easy to understand. An typical example to look at would be optus.com.au:
IN TXT "v=spf1 mx/24 include:opt01._spf.optin2.com.au ip4:180.92.216.0/21 include:rightnowtech.com include:rnmk.com include:custhelp.com ~all"
Do the hosts (and the range of IP addresses) in the policies belong to optus.com.au? Maybe. Maybe not. We cannot discern that just by looking at the host names, nor can we, within any real degree of certainty, determine it programmatically. However, the hosts' SPF records have been trusted to send mail on behalf of optus.com.au, so they remain hosts of interest for penetration testers and may not pop up in other DNS requests (A, MX, AFXR, etc..)
What is a common example of a host who would be in a domain's SPF policies but not actually part of the company who owns the policy? Any mail filtering company who filters outbound mail.
Just a thought that has been floating around in my head...
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