I know I can redirect ports and run stuff on alternate ports.  That is 
not really the point.  It is too much trouble...  I shouldn't have to 
go to these sorts of extremes because my ISP thinks they know what is 
"good" traffic and what is "bad" traffic.  It is like buying a truck 
with a V-8, but the dealer only provides 7 of the 8 fuel injectors 
because they think I will drive too fast with all of them installed.

Shannon

On Jan 28, 2004, at 7:58 AM, Tim Fournet wrote:

> On Wed, 2004-01-28 at 07:33, will hill wrote:
>
>> When Cox blocked outgoing port 25, I set exim to use cox's smtp 
>> rather than change all of my email client programs.
>
> All I did was my mail server off of Cox's network, set it to listen on 
> a
> second port, and put an iptables rule to redirect traffic destined for
> port 25 to the port that I'm using for smtp on the mail server.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> General mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://brlug.net/mailman/listinfo/general_brlug.net
>

--
Shannon Roddy
LIGO - Caltech
225.686.3106 (work)
225.933.7821 (cell)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to