On 04/22/02, James Cronin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

> As it's still likely to end up with the most popular domains
> @hotmail.com, @yahoo.com, @aol.com having several thousand recipients
> though I'm still interested in whether anyone has more experience
> of ensuring that mail doesn't get blackholed.

        Spam has reached such epic porportions that it is virtually
        guranteed that if you send mail out on a regular basis, you
        will eventually be blackholed somewhere.  But if you follow
        the advice here (as it sounds like you are), most sane folks
        will still accept your mail.

> I'm thinking along the lines of whether and how it's necessary to
> rate limit sending to those domains, whether they don't like single
> messages having more than a certain number of RCPT TO lines, whether
> there are contracts that one can sign to get access to some sort of
> super special non-public MX for them, etc...
> 
> or whether it's just all pot luck ;)

        It varies a lot, depending on the provider.  However, it'd
        probably help to remember that a load of mail which might
        DoS a small provider will almost certainly set off alarms at
        large providers...and that may get you blocked.

-- 
J.D. Falk                                 "say your peace" -- Scott Nelson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>                    (probably a typo, but I like it)

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