At 02:11 AM 6/8/2003, David wrote:
Hi all,

Has anyone been noticing this:

The IP address you are using to connect to AOL is a dynamic (residential)
IP address.  AOL will not accept future e-mail transactions from this IP
address until your ISP removes this IP address from its list of dynamic
(residential) IP addresses.  For additional information, please visit
http://postmaster.info.aol.com.

I had this problem with Verizon, I had a class C under a business DSL line feeding my mail server. Light load, no problem. Then I started having problems with ISP's that had the DSL IP block listed as dynamic. Then I find out Verizon listed the DSL blocks that way, not showing my DNS as authoritative.


So I contact my sales drone at Verizon and find out they don't allow servers on the business class DSL unless you sign a different contract (meaning more $$$) and they won't delegate DNS anymore (hence all my reverse DNS entires quit).

I put out a bid for a T1, and found a T1 with 2 class C's was cheaper then the lash up Verizon was trying to sell me under DSL, and over $1k cheaper then their T1 with 1 class C.


~David


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--------------
Rich Griebel
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.kendra.com
Scanned for Viruses using Declude and F-Prot




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