Yes..

1. Customers remember it more easily
2. Some ISP's also block 587 (hence 'SMTP ports' rather then 'SMTP port' in my previous comment ;-)


Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:


Sent from my iPhone, please excuse any errors.


On Jun 19, 2009, at 8:53, Jeroen Wunnink <jer...@easyhosting.nl> wrote:

We just open port 2525 for customers from ISP's blocking official SMTP ports so they can use their dedicated servers/domain mailservers.

Is there any reason you do not use port 587, SUBMIT?

-- TTFN,
patrick


Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
On Thu, 2009-06-18 at 16:14 -0400, Joe Provo wrote:

then you should be shifting your userbase to authenticated on the
SUBMIT port [587] anyway...


Except for those ISPs who choose to intercept port 587 as well. This is
a big problem with Rogers in Vancouver. They hijack port 587 connections through some sort of lame proxy that connects you to your intended host,
but strips the AUTH field out of the EHLO response from the remote
submission server ...




--

Met vriendelijke groet,

Jeroen Wunnink,
EasyHosting B.V. Systeembeheerder
systeembeh...@easyhosting.nl

telefoon:+31 (035) 6285455              Postbus 48
fax: +31 (035) 6838242                  3755 ZG Eemnes

http://www.easyhosting.nl
http://www.easycolocate.nl





--

Met vriendelijke groet,

Jeroen Wunnink,
EasyHosting B.V. Systeembeheerder
systeembeh...@easyhosting.nl

telefoon:+31 (035) 6285455              Postbus 48
fax: +31 (035) 6838242                  3755 ZG Eemnes

http://www.easyhosting.nl
http://www.easycolocate.nl



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