I am going to guess they have received complaints for the range you're in and then go overboard and blackhole entire /24's or some such. Or someone is forging mail headers with your IP in it. I've seen it happen before at the ISP I used to work for.
On 2/21/09, Michael Rasmussen <mich...@jamhome.us> wrote: > I sent some email to a friend who has email through att.net. The same > friend > that I sent mail to without incident in January. Back came the RBL bounce > from ATT. WT_? I know I sent mail to her just a few weeks ago without > incident. > > So I go to the website referred to in the bounce notice to get ATT to do > something about it. As I start to type in each field my previous response - > from doing this last summer (when the IP range was new to me) pops up for > auto > complete. I've been here, done this, been cleared for traffic. > > Of course ATT won't tell me how I got onto their BL list. I'm beginning to > think that if you're not a major mail provider (GMail, big ISP mail > services) > they periodically black hole you. > > Anyone have any argument to suggest I'm just being paranoid? > Small mail service folks are getting stomped on. > > -- > Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon > Be appropriate && Follow your curiosity > http://www.jamhome.us/ > The fortune cookie says: > Sometimes I wonder if I'm in my right mind. Then it passes off and I'm > as intelligent as ever. > -- Samuel Beckett, "Endgame" > > _______________________________________________ > PLUG mailing list > PLUG@lists.pdxlinux.org > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug > -- Sent from my mobile device _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list PLUG@lists.pdxlinux.org http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug