A possible solution to this problem is to bring your mail server 
in-house, and/or use an affordable outbound mail service such as 
DynDNS's Mailhop Outbound. If you don't have a static IP address 
in-house, DynDNS's CustomDNS service solves that problem affordably.

Disclaimer: I'm not associated with DynDNS, but I do use and recommend 
their services.

Joe Canner wrote:
> Yes, Level 1 protection seems reasonable.  We passed level 1 but failed
> level 2 and 3 because of other clients using our ISP.  I've only had one
> recipient so far block us because of this, but I fear this might be just the
> beginning.
> 
> I agree that ISPs should take some responsibility for their clients' spam.
> I hope our ISP will respond to our complaint.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kulkarni Shantanu
> Sent: Friday, February 27, 2009 14:44
> To: spamdyke users
> Subject: Re: [spamdyke-users] spam analysis
> 
> yes, but i use their level 1 protection. level 2 & 3 are indeed
> aggressive. but i am also of the opinion that isps are partly responsible
> for their clients using their bandwidth to spam and they should
> blacklist these customers and take legal action against them.
> 
> Shantanu


-- 
-Eric 'shubes'

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