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Posted by Jerry Stuckle on 09/18/07 10:33
Sanders Kaufman wrote:
> C. wrote:
>> On 16 Sep, 21:55, Sanders Kaufman <bu...@kaufman.net> wrote:
>>> RageARC wrote:
>>>> I've made a script that sends mails, and it sends mails correctly for
>>>> gMail, but not for Hotmail. What happens is that on Hotmail the mails
>>>> are not even received! Nor on spam box, nor on inbox.
>> <snip>
>>> It may cost a nickel or two, but sending your mail out through a third
>>> party SMTP server that uses SSL, instead of your hosting providers
>>> default mail relay may allow the mail to go through.
>>
>> ?
>
> If you're on a black-hole list, it's easier to find a new relay than to
> try to fight the most powerful force in the universe. :)
>
Actually, most blacklists (at least the commonly used ones) will remove
the host within 24 hours of the spam stopping. They understand
sometimes a hosting company gets blind-sided by a spammer, and as long
as the problem is fixed quickly, the server will be removed from the
blacklist quickly.
> If you use SSL to connect to the SMTP relay, your login credentials
> can't easily be "sniffed".
>
But that's not the most common reason for a server getting blacklisted.
And it's also only valid if you have your own MTA (not shared by
anyone else) on your own IP and have it configured correctly.
>
>> Certainly you will have problems sending mail from a known DHCP
>> address (on Unix/Linux try a null mailer going through a registered
>> MX) if you have an MX address on the origin already, make sure you've
>> got a sensible SPF enabled in your DNS.
>
> SPF?
>
I thought you were an expert on this.
Something that's a good concept, but full of holes. It's not widely
used, and probably never will be.
>
>> At the end of the day, though, the Hotmail service is worth exactly
>> what most users pay for it. And don't expect any help from them as to
>> why mail gets detected as SPAM.
>
> When I first started participating in Usenet Political discussions, I
> used my hotmail address - then one day I tried to login and got a "go to
> hell, you spammer" denial message. Same thing with Yahoo.
>
> Screw 'em, both.
>
And it can happen on any email you post on usenet.
--
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Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
JDS Computer Training Corp.
jstucklex@attglobal.net
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