Paul G. Allen wrote: > Paul G. Allen wrote: >> Well, for now this has been resolved. >> >> It took them a day, but they removed us from their block list. Looking >> over the mail logs today, our mail server sends a LOT of mail to >> Comcast customers. Apparently there's a good many of them that are >> subscribed to some of our customers' mailing lists, etc. It appears >> that Comcast blocks mail from domains that send them a lot of mail, >> whether it's spam or not. >> >> Rather stupid if you ask me (but you didn't ;) ). >> > > OK, I'm now convinced that Comcast has some morons working for them. > They are once again blocking us. WTF is a host/ISP supposed to do when > their mail server hosts many domains, some with mailing lists that > happen to have many subscribers that use Comcast? > > It seems they don't filter on content or based upon any of the public > blacklists, etc. Instead they use some pattern of their own making?
So what is the proper way to get some action on such problems. Does Comcast have to adhere to some rules applying to regulated monopolies or common carriers or something like that? What is the complaint-escalation path? If this becomes another horror story of "Our American Way" (tm), maybe we should shift discussion over to -kooler? :-) Regards, ..jim -- [email protected] http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list
