Re: a new sendmail question

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Les Mikesell wrote:
Kevin J. Cummings wrote:

I have tried to poke around in google for this before,
but never found a satisfactory answer.

Say I'm not running my own server, I don't have a domain name,
i.e., a typical home computer.

I got mine from DynDNS.  It is free for home use, allows me to
"register" my IP address from my ISP (DynDNS publishes the MX records
for me), and I can run sendmail locally to both accept incoming emals
and send outgoing emails.

However, many places will reject email sent directly from dynamic address ranges, so even if port 25 isn't blocked you may have to relay through your ISP server or a 3rd party service to keep it from being rejected as spam.

relaying via your IAP has advantages for you too, sometimes the intended recipient's system is down, and so the mail must be retried at intervals (up to five days I think; that's what sendmail defaults to). I'm very happy for my IAP provider to handle that.

Oh, if your IP address is prone to changing, there is significant risk you will get one some spammer's used recently, and so it might be in some block lists. Relaying via your IAP generally gets round those, and if your IAP's server gets listed, it's a fair bet they will notice before you do and will be anxious to get around it.

_I_ don't block mail because it comes from dynamic addresses, but I often do block entire class C networks when someone in the range tries to spam me.

I block by firewall rules, you'll time out if I don't like you.





--

Cheers
John

-- spambait
1aaaaaaa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx  Z1aaaaaaa@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-- Advice
http://webfoot.com/advice/email.top.php
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555375

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