I checked that a few weeks ago and I gave it a go again with the link you provided. The IP in question isn't listed anywhere I could find. If it was an issue with a black list, users should receive an email, saying that their email was rejected by X black list and that they should visit the said black list site to learn more information. The message I am getting from Yahoo is totally different.
Thanks for the link though, it seems like a better tool than the one I've been using before. However, I was pointed to our ISP's network or part of is blacklisted on http://www.aspews.org/ but I've never used those and never heard of those before. Their FAQ indirectly says that Yahoo isn't using their system. -- Ravnox On Fri, 04 Sep 2009 09:09:14 -0400 David Montminy <[email protected]> wrote: > The other possibility is that you somehow got blacklisted with a > service like SpamCop. If that is the case, you got a bigger problem > than simply Yahoo or AOL. > > The problem with these systems is that due to the high volume of spam > they receive, they usually don't check everything (like forged > headers) and can block large IP Blocks... Which sometimes includes > your own IP. > > I would check with blacklists lookup services to make sure your IP is > not on thoses... Something like > http://www.mxtoolbox.com/blacklists.aspx (try for example, > 67.195.9.109 which is a Yahoo IP. It's blocked by at least one list: > http://www.mxtoolbox.com/SuperTool.aspx?action=blacklist%3a67.195.9.109 ) > > The "joys" of the internet E-mail protocols :) > > David Montminy _______________________________________________ mlug mailing list [email protected] https://listes.koumbit.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mlug-listserv.mlug.ca
