On Apr 20, 2007, at 12:05 PM, Daniel Brown wrote:

I don't really like to, because I run the risk of getting my IP or even netblock blacklisted, but I can't think of any other way to do it if the user doesn't know what carrier the number belongs to. Any ideas on this subject, I'm absolutely more than willing to listen. The way I did it is a hack, no question.... and an ugly one at that. It works, but not at all the way I want it to. And even if it's only about 0.3K per message sent, it
adds up over time.

On 4/20/07, Stut <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Daniel Brown wrote:
> The option that you're discussing is what I've been using for the
last
> several years. All of the ones you sent look correct, from memory, but
I'd
> have to check my scripts to see for sure. When I'm sending a message, I > just send it to all of the providers, because one phone number can only
> exist on one carrier at any given time, so the bounces just go to
> /dev/null.

Speaking on behalf of ISPs around the world, please don't do that. Take the time to figure it out and do it properly. Don't pollute the internet
with more pointless emails.

-Stut


How does Yahoo do it? You can send text messages through YMessenger and all you need is the number. You can probably do that with others but that's the only one I've ever used.

I'd be surprised if they are sending out billions of useless emails a day just to get it to work.

Are phone numbers assigned like ip addresses? Is there an arin.net for phones? I would think there is some way they keep track of all that.

Ed

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