On Friday, 2002-09-27 at 03:14 GMT, "E.B. Dreger" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > It's difficult for TCP to work when there's no return path, > unless one has highly-predictable ISNs. Chances are it's > "inside" the network.
Perhaps you missed the point where the original problem was with an email address: " I have this very odd email address found with one of our employees.... <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>" Email addresses, in fact everything in rfc822 headers, are unrelated to tcp connectivity issues. If the employee got the email I'm willing to assume there was connectivity. If you wish, I can describe exactly how such an address could be in the rfc822 From header of a message that could be delivered to you - even if 172.17.0.1 is the address of the originating device and you have no way of reaching that address. Tony Rall
