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]
