On 2013-07-22, Gilles <nos...@nospam.com> wrote: > On Sun, 21 Jul 2013 21:01:09 +0000 (UTC), Grant Edwards ><invalid@invalid.invalid> wrote: >>Unless you've got a static IP address, a domain name, and a valid MX >>record that will match up when they do a reverse DNS lookup, it's >>pretty unlikely that you're going to have much luck running an SMTP >>server. Most other SMTP servers are probably going to ignore or >>reject your attempts to transfer mail from your own SMTP server. > > Incidently, how do ISP MTAs find whether the remote MTA is legit or > running on some regular user's computer? > > 1. Query Reverse DNS for IP > 2. Find domain > 3. Query DNS for MX > 4. ?
There are a variety of things they check. They've got lists of IP address blocks that they know are residential DSL/cable customers, and sometimes they'll reject mail from those regardless of what you do. Some will compare the reverse-DNS lookup with the headers to make sure you're being honest about things like return-path, some will compare the IP address with the MX record for the domain they got when they did the reverse-lookup-DNS, and they've all probably got a variety of other secret heuristics they use to generate a "SPAM" score. For many years I ran my own SMTP server and had it configured to deliver mail directly to recipients. About 10 years, I had to give up on that because so many SMTP servers were rejecting/ignoring mail I sent. And I did have a static IP with a valid domain and MX record. But it was a residential DSL IP address, and I suspect that was enough to get mail rejected by some servers. -- Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! Well, O.K. at I'll compromise with my gmail.com principles because of EXISTENTIAL DESPAIR! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list