Email Account under attack (really) - anything I can do?





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Over the last week, there is a constant barrage of authentication failures to my email account from a variety of ip addresses - usually in blocks of exactly 575 attempts.



My password is as strong as a password can be so the chance of brute force winning is infinitesimal. However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting provider keeps locking the email account.



Is there anything I can do (or that I can ask my hosting provider to do), or am I just screwed until the botnet moves on? Anyone with similar experience who can comment on whether I can expect this to ever end?










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  • 41





    Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

    – schroeder
    Apr 6 at 15:04






  • 8





    Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

    – Anders
    Apr 6 at 17:20






  • 30





    Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 22:46






  • 23





    Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

    – jww
    Apr 6 at 23:57








  • 48





    I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

    – pat3d3r
    2 days ago


















76















Over the last week, there is a constant barrage of authentication failures to my email account from a variety of ip addresses - usually in blocks of exactly 575 attempts.



My password is as strong as a password can be so the chance of brute force winning is infinitesimal. However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting provider keeps locking the email account.



Is there anything I can do (or that I can ask my hosting provider to do), or am I just screwed until the botnet moves on? Anyone with similar experience who can comment on whether I can expect this to ever end?










share|improve this question







New contributor




clemdia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 41





    Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

    – schroeder
    Apr 6 at 15:04






  • 8





    Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

    – Anders
    Apr 6 at 17:20






  • 30





    Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 22:46






  • 23





    Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

    – jww
    Apr 6 at 23:57








  • 48





    I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

    – pat3d3r
    2 days ago














76












76








76


11






Over the last week, there is a constant barrage of authentication failures to my email account from a variety of ip addresses - usually in blocks of exactly 575 attempts.



My password is as strong as a password can be so the chance of brute force winning is infinitesimal. However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting provider keeps locking the email account.



Is there anything I can do (or that I can ask my hosting provider to do), or am I just screwed until the botnet moves on? Anyone with similar experience who can comment on whether I can expect this to ever end?










share|improve this question







New contributor




clemdia is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Over the last week, there is a constant barrage of authentication failures to my email account from a variety of ip addresses - usually in blocks of exactly 575 attempts.



My password is as strong as a password can be so the chance of brute force winning is infinitesimal. However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting provider keeps locking the email account.



Is there anything I can do (or that I can ask my hosting provider to do), or am I just screwed until the botnet moves on? Anyone with similar experience who can comment on whether I can expect this to ever end?







email botnet






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asked Apr 6 at 14:51









clemdiaclemdia

481125




481125




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  • 41





    Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

    – schroeder
    Apr 6 at 15:04






  • 8





    Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

    – Anders
    Apr 6 at 17:20






  • 30





    Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 22:46






  • 23





    Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

    – jww
    Apr 6 at 23:57








  • 48





    I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

    – pat3d3r
    2 days ago














  • 41





    Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

    – schroeder
    Apr 6 at 15:04






  • 8





    Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

    – Anders
    Apr 6 at 17:20






  • 30





    Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

    – Nate Eldredge
    Apr 6 at 22:46






  • 23





    Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

    – jww
    Apr 6 at 23:57








  • 48





    I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

    – pat3d3r
    2 days ago








41




41





Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

– schroeder
Apr 6 at 15:04





Ask your email provider to make a change, that's the only options. In the meantime, open a new account and forward all emails to your new account so that you are still functional?

– schroeder
Apr 6 at 15:04




8




8





Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

– Anders
Apr 6 at 17:20





Are you using one of the big email providers (Gmail, etc) or something smaller?

– Anders
Apr 6 at 17:20




30




30





Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

– Nate Eldredge
Apr 6 at 22:46





Get a better provider that isn't so vulnerable to this kind of trivial DoS?

– Nate Eldredge
Apr 6 at 22:46




23




23





Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

– jww
Apr 6 at 23:57







Maybe another account is under attack (Bank? Facebook? Income tax refund? Domain in your possession?), and they are taking out your email so you don't get notified.

– jww
Apr 6 at 23:57






48




48





I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

– pat3d3r
2 days ago





I had a similar experience with my account: The culprit actually was my phone, that had an outdated password for the account and repeatedly tried to log into it unsuccessfully.

– pat3d3r
2 days ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















49














A few thoughts:




  • Usually my first recommendation would be to pick an extremely strong password. But you allready got that covered.

  • If there is two factor authentication available, turn it on. If you are lucky, it might make you an unattractive target and cause the attacker to move on.

  • If the account lock out doesn't affect other methods of reading your mail, like via IMAP, you could switch to that to maintain access. (To be honest, I don't know much about the security of IMAP, so you might want to consider that before turning it on.)

  • Forwarding the mail somewhere else will also ensure that you can read it even if your account is locked.

  • Finally, you can try contacting your email provider. I think your best bet here is to just describe the problem to them, and ask what they can do to help you.






share|improve this answer



















  • 20





    Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:35






  • 3





    What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:36






  • 2





    @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

    – jpmc26
    Apr 6 at 20:27








  • 7





    I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 21:21






  • 15





    @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

    – Anders
    2 days ago



















31














No. That's pretty much the background noise of being on the internet.



From a random server I have with e-mail:



$ sudo grep -c "auth failed" /var/log/mail.log
1109


That's today. It's with fail2ban blocking more than five attempts from the same IP.






share|improve this answer



















  • 31





    This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

    – John Keates
    Apr 6 at 21:27











  • True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago








  • 6





    I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday






  • 1





    @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

    – Doktor J
    13 hours ago



















23















tl/dr: This is your hosting company's problem, not yours. You'll have
to contact them to get it fixed. Their security policies shouldn't
lock you out of your own account. They need to do security better.




You already have some answers that I agree heartily with and which cover the technical aspects of this, but I'm throwing in another answer to cover a "business" item. Here you hit on the crux of the issue:




However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting
provider keeps locking the email account.




In otherwords, the problem isn't your problem. You have done everything you can to secure your account on someone else's mail server - you are using a strong password that can't be brute forced. The underlying issue here is that your hosting provider has implemented a bad security policy. As @vidarlo mentioned, this is just the background noise of the internet. Your hosting provider should know this. Unfortunately their chosen response has the side effect of locking you out of your account.



In essence the combination of your hosting company's choice of security policies and the standard password scanning that happens to every server on the internet has resulted in a denial of service (DoS) of your email. If your email went down because someone attempted an actual DoS of your hosting provider and filled their networks with useless bandwidth, the solution would be quite simple. You wouldn't be here asking what you can do to fix the problem - you'd be talking to your provider and asking them to fix it. After all, the whole point of using a third party email service provider is for them to provide you with a service. If you are not being provided with that service, either because their servers went down, or because their network is crippled by a DoS, or because their security policy is overly zealous and locks you out of your account, then the only real solution is for your hosting provider to fix it and provide you with the service that you are paying them to give you.



Many questions we get here are the result of people ignoring security all together.. However, there are plenty more examples of people trying to do security but just doing it wrong. This is one of the latter. Therefore, you definitely need talk to your hosting provider and get them to fix it. If they can't provide you with the service you are paying for, then you need to switch to a provider that will (although hopefully it won't be the kind of provider that simply doesn't do security at all).






share|improve this answer





















  • 7





    Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

    – Steve Shipway
    2 days ago






  • 3





    Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago






  • 2





    @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago






  • 2





    @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago






  • 1





    I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago



















17














Yeah, it's pretty easy to have your official email address forward your emails to a new "burner" email account. Then in the new email account setup, you set your From: field to your official email address. That way mails go out like this.



 From: account-I-always-had@oldserver.com
Subject: Re: so-and-so
In-Reply-To: <4735813474834434634@theirmail.com>
Sender: burneraccount@newserver.com


Or something like that.



Anyway, that lets you keep your identity at the official email address. The attacks on the login server are irrelevant to receiving and forwarding email.



As is evident from the above, your new email address may be obvious from headers so don't set up an autoresponder. Only correspond with people you trust. If this burner email account comes under attack, trash this burner account, setup another one, and tell the official email server to forward to the new burner.



Then, research who you sent mail to in the last 2 days to the last burner account. One of them compromised it. Use one tactic or another to trick them into attacking this or another burner account, that lets you distinguish who exactly did it.






share|improve this answer



















  • 2





    Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

    – Esa Jokinen
    2 days ago






  • 4





    THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

    – clemdia
    2 days ago








  • 1





    you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

    – sudo rm -rf slash
    2 days ago











  • @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

    – Justin
    11 hours ago











  • @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

    – Doktor J
    6 hours ago



















0














This is dependent on your provider and what they are willing to do.



If you had a static IP you could ask them to whitelist your IP. Maybe even your CIDR, but if you do too many of those some of the bad traffic may start to come through.



After so many attempts your provider should temporarily ban the IP addresses attacking them. Now hackers have thousands even 10's of thousands of IP to choose from but eventually they might be able to block them all.



Obviously your provider needs better ddos protection.






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    5 Answers
    5






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    5 Answers
    5






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    49














    A few thoughts:




    • Usually my first recommendation would be to pick an extremely strong password. But you allready got that covered.

    • If there is two factor authentication available, turn it on. If you are lucky, it might make you an unattractive target and cause the attacker to move on.

    • If the account lock out doesn't affect other methods of reading your mail, like via IMAP, you could switch to that to maintain access. (To be honest, I don't know much about the security of IMAP, so you might want to consider that before turning it on.)

    • Forwarding the mail somewhere else will also ensure that you can read it even if your account is locked.

    • Finally, you can try contacting your email provider. I think your best bet here is to just describe the problem to them, and ask what they can do to help you.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 20





      Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:35






    • 3





      What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:36






    • 2





      @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

      – jpmc26
      Apr 6 at 20:27








    • 7





      I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 21:21






    • 15





      @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

      – Anders
      2 days ago
















    49














    A few thoughts:




    • Usually my first recommendation would be to pick an extremely strong password. But you allready got that covered.

    • If there is two factor authentication available, turn it on. If you are lucky, it might make you an unattractive target and cause the attacker to move on.

    • If the account lock out doesn't affect other methods of reading your mail, like via IMAP, you could switch to that to maintain access. (To be honest, I don't know much about the security of IMAP, so you might want to consider that before turning it on.)

    • Forwarding the mail somewhere else will also ensure that you can read it even if your account is locked.

    • Finally, you can try contacting your email provider. I think your best bet here is to just describe the problem to them, and ask what they can do to help you.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 20





      Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:35






    • 3





      What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:36






    • 2





      @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

      – jpmc26
      Apr 6 at 20:27








    • 7





      I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 21:21






    • 15





      @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

      – Anders
      2 days ago














    49












    49








    49







    A few thoughts:




    • Usually my first recommendation would be to pick an extremely strong password. But you allready got that covered.

    • If there is two factor authentication available, turn it on. If you are lucky, it might make you an unattractive target and cause the attacker to move on.

    • If the account lock out doesn't affect other methods of reading your mail, like via IMAP, you could switch to that to maintain access. (To be honest, I don't know much about the security of IMAP, so you might want to consider that before turning it on.)

    • Forwarding the mail somewhere else will also ensure that you can read it even if your account is locked.

    • Finally, you can try contacting your email provider. I think your best bet here is to just describe the problem to them, and ask what they can do to help you.






    share|improve this answer













    A few thoughts:




    • Usually my first recommendation would be to pick an extremely strong password. But you allready got that covered.

    • If there is two factor authentication available, turn it on. If you are lucky, it might make you an unattractive target and cause the attacker to move on.

    • If the account lock out doesn't affect other methods of reading your mail, like via IMAP, you could switch to that to maintain access. (To be honest, I don't know much about the security of IMAP, so you might want to consider that before turning it on.)

    • Forwarding the mail somewhere else will also ensure that you can read it even if your account is locked.

    • Finally, you can try contacting your email provider. I think your best bet here is to just describe the problem to them, and ask what they can do to help you.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 6 at 17:01









    AndersAnders

    50.4k22144166




    50.4k22144166








    • 20





      Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:35






    • 3





      What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:36






    • 2





      @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

      – jpmc26
      Apr 6 at 20:27








    • 7





      I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 21:21






    • 15





      @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

      – Anders
      2 days ago














    • 20





      Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:35






    • 3





      What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 18:36






    • 2





      @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

      – jpmc26
      Apr 6 at 20:27








    • 7





      I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

      – Barmar
      Apr 6 at 21:21






    • 15





      @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

      – Anders
      2 days ago








    20




    20





    Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:35





    Would 2FA really help? The second factor isn't usually attemped until after a correct password is entered, and the attacker will never get that far.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:35




    3




    3





    What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:36





    What makes you think he's not already using IMAP?

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 18:36




    2




    2





    @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

    – jpmc26
    Apr 6 at 20:27







    @Barmar If the attacker's script isn't written to try to enter anything on the second factor, it might prevent the lock out. Worth a try at least.

    – jpmc26
    Apr 6 at 20:27






    7




    7





    I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 21:21





    I think most 2FA systems don't prompt for the second factor until after you successfully pass the first.

    – Barmar
    Apr 6 at 21:21




    15




    15





    @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

    – Anders
    2 days ago





    @Barmar Yes, that is true, but my advice still stands. There is a non zero chance it helps, the effort is near zero, the risk is zero, and you should probably do it anyway. So even if it probably doesn't help, you should still do it.

    – Anders
    2 days ago













    31














    No. That's pretty much the background noise of being on the internet.



    From a random server I have with e-mail:



    $ sudo grep -c "auth failed" /var/log/mail.log
    1109


    That's today. It's with fail2ban blocking more than five attempts from the same IP.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 31





      This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

      – John Keates
      Apr 6 at 21:27











    • True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 6





      I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

      – aaaaaa
      yesterday






    • 1





      @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

      – Doktor J
      13 hours ago
















    31














    No. That's pretty much the background noise of being on the internet.



    From a random server I have with e-mail:



    $ sudo grep -c "auth failed" /var/log/mail.log
    1109


    That's today. It's with fail2ban blocking more than five attempts from the same IP.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 31





      This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

      – John Keates
      Apr 6 at 21:27











    • True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 6





      I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

      – aaaaaa
      yesterday






    • 1





      @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

      – Doktor J
      13 hours ago














    31












    31








    31







    No. That's pretty much the background noise of being on the internet.



    From a random server I have with e-mail:



    $ sudo grep -c "auth failed" /var/log/mail.log
    1109


    That's today. It's with fail2ban blocking more than five attempts from the same IP.






    share|improve this answer













    No. That's pretty much the background noise of being on the internet.



    From a random server I have with e-mail:



    $ sudo grep -c "auth failed" /var/log/mail.log
    1109


    That's today. It's with fail2ban blocking more than five attempts from the same IP.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 6 at 16:47









    vidarlovidarlo

    3,849823




    3,849823








    • 31





      This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

      – John Keates
      Apr 6 at 21:27











    • True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 6





      I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

      – aaaaaa
      yesterday






    • 1





      @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

      – Doktor J
      13 hours ago














    • 31





      This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

      – John Keates
      Apr 6 at 21:27











    • True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 6





      I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

      – aaaaaa
      yesterday






    • 1





      @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

      – Doktor J
      13 hours ago








    31




    31





    This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

    – John Keates
    Apr 6 at 21:27





    This is not the same thing. He is referring to one specific account, not the complete authentication log for a mailserver. This is attempts at one specific user.

    – John Keates
    Apr 6 at 21:27













    True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago







    True it is my account specifically - but I think vidario has it right in a general sense. My hosting company recently updated their implementation of csf, and I wonder if it’s too strict - I’ve been wondering if the attacks are nothing new - just a new policy of locking account after “x failed attempts in y minutes”...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago






    6




    6





    I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday





    I understood this answer to show that even for some random server online, failed authentication attempts are plentiful and should be expected (which is true), not trying to equate the example to OP's use-case.

    – aaaaaa
    yesterday




    1




    1





    @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

    – Doktor J
    13 hours ago





    @clemdia yeah, you might want to contact them then, and let them know that their "security" is turning a run-of-the-mill brute force drive-by into a DoS by locking the legitmate user (you) out of the account. They should be blocking authentication attempts by IP, not by account, that's terrible practice.

    – Doktor J
    13 hours ago











    23















    tl/dr: This is your hosting company's problem, not yours. You'll have
    to contact them to get it fixed. Their security policies shouldn't
    lock you out of your own account. They need to do security better.




    You already have some answers that I agree heartily with and which cover the technical aspects of this, but I'm throwing in another answer to cover a "business" item. Here you hit on the crux of the issue:




    However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting
    provider keeps locking the email account.




    In otherwords, the problem isn't your problem. You have done everything you can to secure your account on someone else's mail server - you are using a strong password that can't be brute forced. The underlying issue here is that your hosting provider has implemented a bad security policy. As @vidarlo mentioned, this is just the background noise of the internet. Your hosting provider should know this. Unfortunately their chosen response has the side effect of locking you out of your account.



    In essence the combination of your hosting company's choice of security policies and the standard password scanning that happens to every server on the internet has resulted in a denial of service (DoS) of your email. If your email went down because someone attempted an actual DoS of your hosting provider and filled their networks with useless bandwidth, the solution would be quite simple. You wouldn't be here asking what you can do to fix the problem - you'd be talking to your provider and asking them to fix it. After all, the whole point of using a third party email service provider is for them to provide you with a service. If you are not being provided with that service, either because their servers went down, or because their network is crippled by a DoS, or because their security policy is overly zealous and locks you out of your account, then the only real solution is for your hosting provider to fix it and provide you with the service that you are paying them to give you.



    Many questions we get here are the result of people ignoring security all together.. However, there are plenty more examples of people trying to do security but just doing it wrong. This is one of the latter. Therefore, you definitely need talk to your hosting provider and get them to fix it. If they can't provide you with the service you are paying for, then you need to switch to a provider that will (although hopefully it won't be the kind of provider that simply doesn't do security at all).






    share|improve this answer





















    • 7





      Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

      – Steve Shipway
      2 days ago






    • 3





      Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 1





      I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago
















    23















    tl/dr: This is your hosting company's problem, not yours. You'll have
    to contact them to get it fixed. Their security policies shouldn't
    lock you out of your own account. They need to do security better.




    You already have some answers that I agree heartily with and which cover the technical aspects of this, but I'm throwing in another answer to cover a "business" item. Here you hit on the crux of the issue:




    However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting
    provider keeps locking the email account.




    In otherwords, the problem isn't your problem. You have done everything you can to secure your account on someone else's mail server - you are using a strong password that can't be brute forced. The underlying issue here is that your hosting provider has implemented a bad security policy. As @vidarlo mentioned, this is just the background noise of the internet. Your hosting provider should know this. Unfortunately their chosen response has the side effect of locking you out of your account.



    In essence the combination of your hosting company's choice of security policies and the standard password scanning that happens to every server on the internet has resulted in a denial of service (DoS) of your email. If your email went down because someone attempted an actual DoS of your hosting provider and filled their networks with useless bandwidth, the solution would be quite simple. You wouldn't be here asking what you can do to fix the problem - you'd be talking to your provider and asking them to fix it. After all, the whole point of using a third party email service provider is for them to provide you with a service. If you are not being provided with that service, either because their servers went down, or because their network is crippled by a DoS, or because their security policy is overly zealous and locks you out of your account, then the only real solution is for your hosting provider to fix it and provide you with the service that you are paying them to give you.



    Many questions we get here are the result of people ignoring security all together.. However, there are plenty more examples of people trying to do security but just doing it wrong. This is one of the latter. Therefore, you definitely need talk to your hosting provider and get them to fix it. If they can't provide you with the service you are paying for, then you need to switch to a provider that will (although hopefully it won't be the kind of provider that simply doesn't do security at all).






    share|improve this answer





















    • 7





      Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

      – Steve Shipway
      2 days ago






    • 3





      Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 1





      I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago














    23












    23








    23








    tl/dr: This is your hosting company's problem, not yours. You'll have
    to contact them to get it fixed. Their security policies shouldn't
    lock you out of your own account. They need to do security better.




    You already have some answers that I agree heartily with and which cover the technical aspects of this, but I'm throwing in another answer to cover a "business" item. Here you hit on the crux of the issue:




    However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting
    provider keeps locking the email account.




    In otherwords, the problem isn't your problem. You have done everything you can to secure your account on someone else's mail server - you are using a strong password that can't be brute forced. The underlying issue here is that your hosting provider has implemented a bad security policy. As @vidarlo mentioned, this is just the background noise of the internet. Your hosting provider should know this. Unfortunately their chosen response has the side effect of locking you out of your account.



    In essence the combination of your hosting company's choice of security policies and the standard password scanning that happens to every server on the internet has resulted in a denial of service (DoS) of your email. If your email went down because someone attempted an actual DoS of your hosting provider and filled their networks with useless bandwidth, the solution would be quite simple. You wouldn't be here asking what you can do to fix the problem - you'd be talking to your provider and asking them to fix it. After all, the whole point of using a third party email service provider is for them to provide you with a service. If you are not being provided with that service, either because their servers went down, or because their network is crippled by a DoS, or because their security policy is overly zealous and locks you out of your account, then the only real solution is for your hosting provider to fix it and provide you with the service that you are paying them to give you.



    Many questions we get here are the result of people ignoring security all together.. However, there are plenty more examples of people trying to do security but just doing it wrong. This is one of the latter. Therefore, you definitely need talk to your hosting provider and get them to fix it. If they can't provide you with the service you are paying for, then you need to switch to a provider that will (although hopefully it won't be the kind of provider that simply doesn't do security at all).






    share|improve this answer
















    tl/dr: This is your hosting company's problem, not yours. You'll have
    to contact them to get it fixed. Their security policies shouldn't
    lock you out of your own account. They need to do security better.




    You already have some answers that I agree heartily with and which cover the technical aspects of this, but I'm throwing in another answer to cover a "business" item. Here you hit on the crux of the issue:




    However as a result of the authentication failures, my hosting
    provider keeps locking the email account.




    In otherwords, the problem isn't your problem. You have done everything you can to secure your account on someone else's mail server - you are using a strong password that can't be brute forced. The underlying issue here is that your hosting provider has implemented a bad security policy. As @vidarlo mentioned, this is just the background noise of the internet. Your hosting provider should know this. Unfortunately their chosen response has the side effect of locking you out of your account.



    In essence the combination of your hosting company's choice of security policies and the standard password scanning that happens to every server on the internet has resulted in a denial of service (DoS) of your email. If your email went down because someone attempted an actual DoS of your hosting provider and filled their networks with useless bandwidth, the solution would be quite simple. You wouldn't be here asking what you can do to fix the problem - you'd be talking to your provider and asking them to fix it. After all, the whole point of using a third party email service provider is for them to provide you with a service. If you are not being provided with that service, either because their servers went down, or because their network is crippled by a DoS, or because their security policy is overly zealous and locks you out of your account, then the only real solution is for your hosting provider to fix it and provide you with the service that you are paying them to give you.



    Many questions we get here are the result of people ignoring security all together.. However, there are plenty more examples of people trying to do security but just doing it wrong. This is one of the latter. Therefore, you definitely need talk to your hosting provider and get them to fix it. If they can't provide you with the service you are paying for, then you need to switch to a provider that will (although hopefully it won't be the kind of provider that simply doesn't do security at all).







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered 2 days ago









    Conor ManconeConor Mancone

    10.6k32152




    10.6k32152








    • 7





      Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

      – Steve Shipway
      2 days ago






    • 3





      Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 1





      I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago














    • 7





      Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

      – Steve Shipway
      2 days ago






    • 3





      Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

      – clemdia
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 2





      @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago






    • 1





      I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

      – Conor Mancone
      2 days ago








    7




    7





    Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

    – Steve Shipway
    2 days ago





    Yes, +1 for this. I work for an email security company, and we have far more intelligent anti-bruteforce systems than the OP is experiencing. This sort of blunt-instrument protection is unnecessary - locking out the legitimate user because of a brute-force is just inviting denial-of-service. Consider changing your email provider if possible...

    – Steve Shipway
    2 days ago




    3




    3





    Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago





    Turns out they reimplemented CSF (and maybe some other things) just before this started happening. I suspect they've implemented a policy that deflects/denies all authentication requests (regardless of source IP) after "x attempts in n minutes" - I can watch myself connect to the server, get refused, submit the same credentials a few more times, get refused a few more times, and then suddenly the credentials work. I do this with them live on the phone. They agree it's odd, and then email me log files that show "authentication failures" from my IP address. Yeah, no kidding...

    – clemdia
    2 days ago




    2




    2





    @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago





    @clemdia hard to say with 100% certainty, but it definitely sounds like this is exclusively an issue on their end and (either way) can only be fixed on their end. To some extent they are also using you as a beta tester (intentionally or not). Just about all tech companies do that to some extent, so I give you props for your patience, but it also isn't something that you have to continue to do, especially if they continue to provide a broken service.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago




    2




    2





    @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago





    @clemdia An example of a simple bug that could explain this: "Authentication failure" is a very broad error message. It could be that their system uses that for any broad class of authentication failures including, "Automatically blocked because of too many failed attempts". Therefore, botnets trigger the block on your account, then you try to login and get Authentication Failure - not because your credentials were wrong, but because you were auto banned. They see "Authentication failure" and therefore conclude you typed your password wrong, missing the larger issue.

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago




    1




    1





    I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago





    I'm not claiming for sure that that is what happened, but stuff like that is easy to have happen and easy to miss. As a programmer on the other end, it is easy to put bugs in the most obvious box and sometimes miss the root cause, causing issues to take longer to resolve than necessary... of course I've never done that myself...

    – Conor Mancone
    2 days ago











    17














    Yeah, it's pretty easy to have your official email address forward your emails to a new "burner" email account. Then in the new email account setup, you set your From: field to your official email address. That way mails go out like this.



     From: account-I-always-had@oldserver.com
    Subject: Re: so-and-so
    In-Reply-To: <4735813474834434634@theirmail.com>
    Sender: burneraccount@newserver.com


    Or something like that.



    Anyway, that lets you keep your identity at the official email address. The attacks on the login server are irrelevant to receiving and forwarding email.



    As is evident from the above, your new email address may be obvious from headers so don't set up an autoresponder. Only correspond with people you trust. If this burner email account comes under attack, trash this burner account, setup another one, and tell the official email server to forward to the new burner.



    Then, research who you sent mail to in the last 2 days to the last burner account. One of them compromised it. Use one tactic or another to trick them into attacking this or another burner account, that lets you distinguish who exactly did it.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

      – Esa Jokinen
      2 days ago






    • 4





      THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 1





      you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

      – sudo rm -rf slash
      2 days ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

      – Justin
      11 hours ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

      – Doktor J
      6 hours ago
















    17














    Yeah, it's pretty easy to have your official email address forward your emails to a new "burner" email account. Then in the new email account setup, you set your From: field to your official email address. That way mails go out like this.



     From: account-I-always-had@oldserver.com
    Subject: Re: so-and-so
    In-Reply-To: <4735813474834434634@theirmail.com>
    Sender: burneraccount@newserver.com


    Or something like that.



    Anyway, that lets you keep your identity at the official email address. The attacks on the login server are irrelevant to receiving and forwarding email.



    As is evident from the above, your new email address may be obvious from headers so don't set up an autoresponder. Only correspond with people you trust. If this burner email account comes under attack, trash this burner account, setup another one, and tell the official email server to forward to the new burner.



    Then, research who you sent mail to in the last 2 days to the last burner account. One of them compromised it. Use one tactic or another to trick them into attacking this or another burner account, that lets you distinguish who exactly did it.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 2





      Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

      – Esa Jokinen
      2 days ago






    • 4





      THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 1





      you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

      – sudo rm -rf slash
      2 days ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

      – Justin
      11 hours ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

      – Doktor J
      6 hours ago














    17












    17








    17







    Yeah, it's pretty easy to have your official email address forward your emails to a new "burner" email account. Then in the new email account setup, you set your From: field to your official email address. That way mails go out like this.



     From: account-I-always-had@oldserver.com
    Subject: Re: so-and-so
    In-Reply-To: <4735813474834434634@theirmail.com>
    Sender: burneraccount@newserver.com


    Or something like that.



    Anyway, that lets you keep your identity at the official email address. The attacks on the login server are irrelevant to receiving and forwarding email.



    As is evident from the above, your new email address may be obvious from headers so don't set up an autoresponder. Only correspond with people you trust. If this burner email account comes under attack, trash this burner account, setup another one, and tell the official email server to forward to the new burner.



    Then, research who you sent mail to in the last 2 days to the last burner account. One of them compromised it. Use one tactic or another to trick them into attacking this or another burner account, that lets you distinguish who exactly did it.






    share|improve this answer













    Yeah, it's pretty easy to have your official email address forward your emails to a new "burner" email account. Then in the new email account setup, you set your From: field to your official email address. That way mails go out like this.



     From: account-I-always-had@oldserver.com
    Subject: Re: so-and-so
    In-Reply-To: <4735813474834434634@theirmail.com>
    Sender: burneraccount@newserver.com


    Or something like that.



    Anyway, that lets you keep your identity at the official email address. The attacks on the login server are irrelevant to receiving and forwarding email.



    As is evident from the above, your new email address may be obvious from headers so don't set up an autoresponder. Only correspond with people you trust. If this burner email account comes under attack, trash this burner account, setup another one, and tell the official email server to forward to the new burner.



    Then, research who you sent mail to in the last 2 days to the last burner account. One of them compromised it. Use one tactic or another to trick them into attacking this or another burner account, that lets you distinguish who exactly did it.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 6 at 19:02









    HarperHarper

    2,200414




    2,200414








    • 2





      Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

      – Esa Jokinen
      2 days ago






    • 4





      THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 1





      you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

      – sudo rm -rf slash
      2 days ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

      – Justin
      11 hours ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

      – Doktor J
      6 hours ago














    • 2





      Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

      – Esa Jokinen
      2 days ago






    • 4





      THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

      – clemdia
      2 days ago








    • 1





      you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

      – sudo rm -rf slash
      2 days ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

      – Justin
      11 hours ago











    • @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

      – Doktor J
      6 hours ago








    2




    2





    Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

    – Esa Jokinen
    2 days ago





    Or if possible, change username to be different from the address. This way you reply from the same address and have the same mailbox, but prevent account lockout.

    – Esa Jokinen
    2 days ago




    4




    4





    THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

    – clemdia
    2 days ago







    THIS (if only it were possible) - btw this experience has highlighted the lunacy of websites REQUIRING email address as username - just stupid.

    – clemdia
    2 days ago






    1




    1





    you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

    – sudo rm -rf slash
    2 days ago





    you might try using + to add a per domain suffix. then when you get spam it will (most likely) include who leaked your email. plus it becomes easy to block all emails that came from the domain

    – sudo rm -rf slash
    2 days ago













    @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

    – Justin
    11 hours ago





    @sudorm-rfslash - I think the the +suffix trick might be gmail specific.

    – Justin
    11 hours ago













    @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

    – Doktor J
    6 hours ago





    @sudorm-rfslash yeah... I actually have my mail server configured to use _ as the "decorator" or "suffix" character. Since many (especially business) domains use a first_last@example.com format, even sites that reject emails with + in them will still happily accept an email with _ in it!

    – Doktor J
    6 hours ago











    0














    This is dependent on your provider and what they are willing to do.



    If you had a static IP you could ask them to whitelist your IP. Maybe even your CIDR, but if you do too many of those some of the bad traffic may start to come through.



    After so many attempts your provider should temporarily ban the IP addresses attacking them. Now hackers have thousands even 10's of thousands of IP to choose from but eventually they might be able to block them all.



    Obviously your provider needs better ddos protection.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      This is dependent on your provider and what they are willing to do.



      If you had a static IP you could ask them to whitelist your IP. Maybe even your CIDR, but if you do too many of those some of the bad traffic may start to come through.



      After so many attempts your provider should temporarily ban the IP addresses attacking them. Now hackers have thousands even 10's of thousands of IP to choose from but eventually they might be able to block them all.



      Obviously your provider needs better ddos protection.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        This is dependent on your provider and what they are willing to do.



        If you had a static IP you could ask them to whitelist your IP. Maybe even your CIDR, but if you do too many of those some of the bad traffic may start to come through.



        After so many attempts your provider should temporarily ban the IP addresses attacking them. Now hackers have thousands even 10's of thousands of IP to choose from but eventually they might be able to block them all.



        Obviously your provider needs better ddos protection.






        share|improve this answer













        This is dependent on your provider and what they are willing to do.



        If you had a static IP you could ask them to whitelist your IP. Maybe even your CIDR, but if you do too many of those some of the bad traffic may start to come through.



        After so many attempts your provider should temporarily ban the IP addresses attacking them. Now hackers have thousands even 10's of thousands of IP to choose from but eventually they might be able to block them all.



        Obviously your provider needs better ddos protection.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 14 hours ago









        cybernardcybernard

        49528




        49528






















            clemdia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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