Spam Eating Monkey SEM-FRESHZERO is a domain-based blocklist (or blacklist) that temporarily lists domains that have been registered or first seen within the last 24 hours to prevent spam from new sources.
Spam Eating Monkey SEM-FRESHZERO is a unique domain-based blocklist (or blacklist) that lists domains that have never been seen before by their systems. This typically includes any domain registered within the last 24 hours. Because it lists domains and not IP addresses, it is considered a URIBL.
The primary purpose of this blacklist is to help mail server administrators identify and apply a spam score to emails containing brand new domains. Spammers frequently use newly registered domains for phishing and spam campaigns, so this list acts as an early warning system. It is designed to be used as part of a larger scoring system, not as a standalone reason to reject an email.
The SEM-FRESHZERO blocklist is operated by SpamEatingMonkey.com. The organization provides real-time IP and domain reputation information to help combat unwanted email.
Spam Eating Monkey makes a clear distinction that they are not the ones blocking your mail. They provide reputation data, and the administrator of the recipient's mail server chooses how to use that information. According to their policy, the data should be used within a scoring system rather than for outright blocking of any mail.
Removal from the Spam Eating Monkey SEM-FRESHZERO blacklist is automatic. There is no manual delisting process required.
Domains are automatically delisted and removed from this specific blocklist after they have been active for 24 hours. If you have just registered a new domain, you should expect it to be on this list for its first day. Once 24 hours have passed, it will be removed without any action on your part.
The impact of being listed on Spam Eating Monkey SEM-FRESHZERO is considered low. Because the listing is temporary and automatic, any negative effect on your email deliverability will be very short-lived.
Most email systems that use this blocklist will assign a small penalty score to messages containing a listed domain, rather than rejecting them completely. While a listing might cause some emails to be routed to the spam folder, it is unlikely to cause widespread blocking, especially since the domain will be delisted after 24 hours. It is a precautionary measure, and its impact reflects that.
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