ing on
this direction (having ESPs as clients). I guess that's what the boss said he
wants.
--
Benjamin
From: Alexander Burch
Sent: Friday, 20 July, 2018 00:30
To: Benjamin BILLON
Cc: mailop@mailop.org
Subject: [mailop] AWS bring your own IP
I had the same initial concern that "bring y
s a "bring your own IP" feature too, but I doubt many
> senders would use it if it was the case.
>
>
>
> Note: I don't know much about AWS in general; also, we have our own ASN
> and we're LIR, that might not be the case for all ESPs.
>
> --
>
> *Benj
In article
you write:
>-=-=-=-=-=-
>-=-=-=-=-=-
>Not sure of the detail of the implementation, but it's named "Bring Your Own
>IP", not "Bring your ranges", so it could not fit with ESPs' needs.
A few seconds looking at the AWS page reveals that you need to bring at least a
/24 that
is assign
Ps.
--
Benjamin
From: mailop On Behalf Of Alexander Burch
Sent: Thursday, 19 July, 2018 19:28
To: mailop@mailop.org
Subject: [mailop] AWS bring your own IP
Traditionally, ESPs have been unable to use AWS for sending mail because AWS
IPs have very bad histories of being used for spam (amon
Traditionally, ESPs have been unable to use AWS for sending mail because
AWS IPs have very bad histories of being used for spam (among other
reasons). I believe most ESPs are running their own servers for email or
using a managed hosting service of some kind that allows them to use
private IPs/rent