> > On Sat, 25 Jul 2009 18:07:12 -0400
> > "Michael W. Cocke" <cocke.mich...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > 
> >> There doesn't seem to be a web interface to subscribe/unscribe from
> >> this list.  The email address
> >> "users-unsubscr...@spamassassin.apache.org"  complains that my IP
> >> address is dynamic (which is why I use dyndns.org, thank you very
> >> much.)  

> On 07/26/09 20:01, quoth RW:
> > Presumably it's complaining that you are sending "direct to mx" from a
> > dynamic IP address. If you run a mail server on an dynamic address, you
> > should send your outgoing mail through a smarthost.

On 26.07.09 22:43, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> I'd be curious to hear more on this. I have a server running at home. My
> ISP gives me a so-called "static address" that I pay extra for. It's
> really just an IP address from their pool of dynamic addresses so it
> registers as really coming from a dynamic address. Somehow I got lucky and
> got a reverse dns record so if you look my ip up you'll see me and not my
> ISP. The rest is done through zoneedit.com which does a fabulous job.

by a "static address" I assume that the address will be always assigned to
you, and only to you. If your ISP taked money for something else, I'd like
to see exactly what that is, however it seems that yous ISP forgot to
exclude static address list off the dynamic block.

We have a few pools of dynamic addresses, marked as dynamic in DNS, WHOIS
records, and in PBL/SORBS/MAPS dynamic lists. If customer asks/pays for
static address, he'll get address from other ranges, statically assigned to
him, and we even can change DNS to his wish if he fullfille basic
requirement of the requested name pointing to the IP. DNS names there are
usually generic, but static as indicated in DNS and WHOIS (and, of course,
not listed in PBL/SORBS/MAPS dynamic address lists).

-- 
Matus UHLAR - fantomas, uh...@fantomas.sk ; http://www.fantomas.sk/
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