> 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???
No, not at all. > 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. It is also unrelated to the certified mail program > Is this going to mean that you can only send to your correspondents with > AOL addresses one at a time? That probably will not help either. It basically starts here: <http://postmaster.aol.com/> A few things could be happening, more than likely, it is your upstream, I think you mentioned comcast. AOL does not, to my knowledge, take steps to identify you as a source of spam, but they do identify your provider. This can be bad, as the bad apples at comcast can spoil it for all comcast users on that mailservers block. This is probably what happened. However, comcast was notified, through the feedback loop system aol provides, they chose to not act on it, or not fix the issue, and spew spam, so aol has blocked the ip. Its hard to say for sure, you are only pasting on the copy of the bounce, not the headers and error codes, so I do not know exactly what server is saying that stuff. -- ------------------------------------------------------------- Scott Haneda Tel: 415.898.2602 <http://www.newgeo.com> Novato, CA U.S.A. -- To unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> archives: <http://www.mail-archive.com/entourage-talk%40lists.letterrip.com/> old-archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/entourage-talk%40lists.boingo.com/>
