> On Tuesday 05 April 2005 13:49, Tony Earnshaw wrote:
>> tir, 05.04.2005 kl. 02.02 skrev [TRF]LisXit Team RaisingFire/Xtreme Team
>>
>> Coders :
>> >  On Tuesday 05 April 2005 00:43, Chris Hilts wrote:
>> > > > X-Authentication-Warning:
>> > > > xemmen.raisingfire.net<http://xemmen.raisingfire.net>: nobody set
>> > > > sender to [EMAIL PROTECTED] using -f
>> > >
>> > > This is a sendmail FAQ, check the sendmail docs.  You can either
>> make
>> > > "nobody" a trusted user, or just tell SquirrelMail to use SMTP
>> instead
>> > > of a binary for outgoing mail.  Squirrelmail is working just as it
>> > > should.
>> >
>> > Thanks, also, Is it true that CBL and SORBS blocks people who does
>> have
>> > X-Authentication-Warning:
>> >
>> > I got blacklisted on those 2 lists while:
>> > My mailserver is not a spamresource,
>> > It's a Close Relay Server, only touchable via a host of my friend
>> > (because port 25 is blocked)
>> >
>> > on SORBS it seems like i was blacklisted a long time ago... well
>> "long"
>> > as i read i saw:
>> > Netblock: 84.24.0.0/13 (84.24.0.0-84.31.255.255)
>> > Last Seen: Fri Nov 26 10:52:14 2004 GMT
>> > Additional Information:
>> > Dynamic/Generic IP/rDNS address, use your ISPs mail server or get rDNS
>> > set to indicate static assignment.
>>
>> You got blocked because you operate a server on a dynamically (DHCP)
>> allocated net block (IP range) 84.24.0.0/13, not because of any mail
>> headers (that last would be stoopid).
>>
>> Change your ISP to one supporting professional mail services.
>>
>> > Because i get a lot of questions now, after i read the last seen line,
>> > I didn't install squirrelmail
>>
>> --Tonni
> phuck @home benelux
> they have setup the blocks,
> because they dont want to have their customers to have own mailservers,
> damn idd
>
> Am thinking of going to xs4all or something else, maybe some more money
> that i
> have to spend, but ok
>
> this is real lame
> really, why did sorbs came up with such idea

It's actually quite a good idea.  It stops lots of people who would
otherwise use dynamically acquired IP addresses (harder to trace, etc)
from spamming the world.  Real world mail servers need to be in a reliable
place in order to function properly, at least w/out a LOT of hacking, so
it turns out to be a pretty good assumption that incoming connections from
servers on dynamic IPs are spambots doing their thing.




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