Quoting "Paul G. Allen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

OK, but it'll give you the same information I've already provided. I
pasted the Spamhaus result in my original post.

host mail.enom.com[63.229.62.198] said: 554 Service
    unavailable; Client host [smtp.randomlogic.net] blocked by
    zen.spamhaus.org; http://www.spamhaus.org/query/bl?ip=68.7.51.89
(in reply to end of DATA command)

They must act fast:
68.7.51.89 is not listed in the SBL
68.7.51.89 is not listed in the PBL
68.7.51.89 is not listed in the XBL

Stupid thing is, that's not even the client host IP.
smtp.randomlogic.net is a completely different IP. That IP is the
orginating IP, not the IP of the mail server.

Is your home box (on the Cox IP) talking directly to the mail.enom.com server? I'd guess from the above part of your message that it is, and that's why it bounced. That's what I had and why I route via an offsite box now.

Also, noticed this which is odd and might confuse checks somewhere:
$ host !$
host smtp.randomlogic.net
smtp.randomlogic.net is an alias for smtp.randomlogic.net.
smtp.randomlogic.net is an alias for smtp.randomlogic.net.
smtp.randomlogic.net is an alias for smtp.randomlogic.net.
Recursive DNS prob?

--
Mike Marion-Unix/Linux Admin-http://www.miguelito.org
Marge: "Homer, sitting that close to the TV can't be good for you."
Homer: "Talking while the TV's on can't be good for you!"
==> Simpsons


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