On 21/05/05, Hetz Ben Hamo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
2. I see that you have a GMAIL account, so I would suggest you to use
it's SMTP capabilities instead of your machine's SMTP.
Gmail rewrite the sender to point to the GMAIL account, AFAIK
-- Arik
Hi Itay,
If I were you I would do 2 things:
1. Leave the default address as you registered it (example:
abcd.dyndns.org) so people could send you emails back directly to your
machine.
2. I see that you have a GMAIL account, so I would suggest you to use
it's SMTP capabilities instead of your
On Saturday 21 May 2005 14:45, Itay Duvdevani wrote:
I am unable to send email messages to half the world,
since my server gets blacklisted all the time (or the receiving server
claims it won't receive mail from dynamic DNS servers).
Unfortunately there's no way to distinguish between your
Hi Itay,
Others already mentioned it - spammers have ruined it for us.
For a practical solution, and the one I use - order a static IP from your
ISP and ask that they update the PTR record for your IP to point to an A
record. You could also ask them to perform DNS service for you. Yeah, it's
not
On Sat, May 21, 2005 at 04:35:31PM +0300, Aviram Jenik wrote:
What you should do is use your ISP's SMTP server as a 'magic relay'. This way
you can still use your mail server for queuing and making sure the mail
leaves your outbox quickly, but instead of going directly to its destination
On 5/21/05, Aviram Jenik [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Saturday 21 May 2005 14:45, Itay Duvdevani wrote:
I am unable to send email messages to half the world,
since my server gets blacklisted all the time (or the receiving server
claims it won't receive mail from dynamic DNS servers).
Quoting Itay Duvdevani, from the post of Sun, 22 May:
But using my ISP SMTP server as a magic-relay would require it to
relay 3rd party messages to 3rd party servers. I assume no ISP would
allow this behavior, because if they would, there are BOTS around the
they DO allow third-party domains