That can be difficult.

 

As an aside.. if anybody has FIOS business class (which you need for
static IP's), I have a contact in that division that is not only willing
to set up a PTR record, he's actually competent!

 

It might save you the 6 hours of call tree surfing I had to do...

 

-sc

 

From: N Parr [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 9:27 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Not wanting to be a spammer

 

Our ISP refused to set up a PTR.  Many of them are ignorant about how it
works or don't want to take the chance you would get one of their IP's
blacklisted.  Finally told them we were going else ware and they caved
with the stipulation if we get blacklisted they won't do anything to
help us.

 

________________________________

From: David W. McSpadden [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 8:21 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Not wanting to be a spammer

They either won't or don't know how but it is an avenue I can never get
them to understand.

 

From: Richard Stovall <mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 9:00 AM

To: NT System Admin Issues
<mailto:[email protected]>  

Subject: RE: Not wanting to be a spammer

 

The reverse lookup (PTR record) is created by the ISP that actually
assigns the ip address space you use.  You'll need to ask them to create
one for you.

 

From: David W. McSpadden [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 8:51 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Not wanting to be a spammer

 

I have an email mailer I am supposed to send out.

It is going to 12000 customers that have asked to be notified by email.

I got that script late last week and I have it set up to run from my
machine, relay off my exchange server, through my Ironport, and out my
firewall.

I do not host the mail at imcu.com and that is the address space I want
to sent it from.  In testing yesterday it seems that everyone will flag
me

as a spammer because the email source can not be reverse looked up
properly.  Now I do own a second domain.  imcu.org and I do have an MX
record that points to my

firewall.  This seems to be the better way to do it.  Have it come from
[email protected] but have a reply to of [email protected].

I do host the imcu.org mail server internally so I could just relay off
that smtp server through the ironport and out the firewall with little
or no worries of getting blacklisted.

 

Right???

Am I even close to thinking this through correctly??

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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