|  | Posted by Sanders Kaufman on 09/18/07 00:39 
Jerry Stuckle wrote:> Sanders Kaufman wrote:
 
 > MTA's are capable of relaying.  But if they are configured correctly
 > they do not, except to intranets.  Spammers love those which are
 > configured as open relays.  They have lists of them all over the world.
 
 I like the way you wobble back and forth on that.
 It's not a realy - except when it is.
 
 And then that slick way you seguay from relays, to open relays - as if
 all relays were open.
 
 That last, of course, is why I suggested that the OP use an SSL secured
 mail relay.
 
 > And POP refers to Post Office Protocol - a protocol for RETRIEVING
 
 Actually, that's just one definition in just one context.  In fact, POP
 is an engineering term, not limited to the email, that means
 "Point-of-Presence".
 
 Thus, like I said a Message Transfer Agent that doesn't transfer (relay)
 the messages is just a POP.
 
 
 
 
 > messages.  POP servers by themselves are not capable of receiving email
 > using the SMTP protocol (the one used for sending mail on the internet).
 >  You need an MTA to receive the email and deliver it to the POP server.
 
 Hmmm - if only there were an engineering term to describe that "receive
 and deliver" process; a word that engineers have been using since the
 first bucket brigade.  Something like "replay" but without the sports
 metaphor?
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