...but of interest to anyone sending emails to more than one AOL address
at a time.
I posted on another list, several days ago, about mail being returned to
me from @AOL.com.
Several suggestions were offered. I changed my IP address, and then was
able to send again to AOL.com addresses.
Today, I sent an email to a group of friends. Several folks on that
group address had AOL.com addresses. It bounced back and the message with
the bounceback was:
> The IP address on your ISP's network has generated a high volume of mail to
> AOL and has exceeded our rate limit. Possible causes include a compromised or
> virus-infected personal computer or a non-disclosed server relaying mail
> within the ISP’s network.
A moment later, an email I had sent to another group address, which
included no AOL addresses (they were comcast.net, charter.net, yahoo.com,
myactv.net, alltel.net, earthlink.net, and gmail.com) also bounced back from
one of the comcast.net addresses. The reason:
> This IP or IP range has been identified as a source of spam or virus email. If
> this problem has been resolved, please enter the information below to submit
> an unblock request.
I wonder if AOL is identifying any incoming email to more than a certain
number of AOL addresses as SPAM and then sharing info with comcast.net???
I have _NEVER_ has this problem with these group addresses in 10 years
of sending them. Only now, with AOL's new Certified Mail program.
Is this going to mean that you can only send to your correspondents with
AOL addresses one at a time?
bob
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