El lun, 04-02-2013 a las 15:25 +0000, David Woodhouse escribió:

> On Mon, 2013-02-04 at 06:16 -0500, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> > That doesn't sound that weird.  *Sending* and *Receiving* are two
> > entirely different operations.  Receiving is POP/IMAP [and rarely
> > blocked by firewalls], sending is SMTP [and almost always blocked by
> > firewalls].
> 
> Sending should be MSA, which is like SMTP except on port 587. And is
> rarely blocked by firewalls. That's kind of why the MSA port was
> introduced. In 1998.
> 
> If you're actually trying to submit via an authentication connection to
> port 25, yes I would expect that to break quite frequently. I'd consider
> that to be a misconfiguration. You should use port 587. And if the
> server isn't listening on port 587 then *it* is misconfigured.
> 
> > Verizon certainly does block SMTP. 
> 
> Surely they don't block port 587?
> 
> >  Hot-spotting through a phone generally stinks,  they do not really
> > provide you an ISP-like connection, it is more of an ISP-lite
> > connection.  ["lite" being a synonym for "crappy"].
> 
> Well, you don't get a proper IP address (neither IPv6 nor even Legacy
> IP) so you're afflicted by NAT¹, but that's fairly much the same as with
> many of the crappy home ISPs that people use, surely?
> 
> _______________________________________________


Problem still remains.  The last email and this one are sending on port
467.  The port 587 doesn't work at all.  Am I doing something wrong?



Regards,
Laialh

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