On 03/03/2011 07:55 AM, Steve Jenkins wrote:
On Wed, Mar 2, 2011 at 10:44 PM, kapetr<kap...@mizera.cz>  wrote:
So once again, I am not spamer!
I hate spam and spamers !!

Being on a blacklist doesn't automatically make you a spammer, but it
does mean something's wrong (possibly with your Postfix config... to
keep things back on topic).

Kapetr,

Your IP *range* is blacklisted because it is a range for home users. The single IP address *you* have is not listed as such; every IP address in the home user IP range probably is. This is quite normal, and occurs in lots of countries.

There is probably nothing wrong with your postfix config, but the IP *range* (i.e. the IP addresses your ISP has reserved for home users) is blacklisted. There is not much you can do with that.

The recommended solution is to relay all outgoing mail through your ISP's SMTP server. Their SMTP server should not be blacklisted. If you do not wish to do that, you run the risk of your outgoing mail being rejected. It's as simple as that.

If you still insist on running postfix at home *without* using your ISP's SMTP server, you could ask your ISP what can be done to get another IP address. This may involve upgrading to a business agreement, or it may not be possible at all.

(All of the above has been mentioned by others already, I hope this sums it up in a simple enough way to be understood.)

--
Bjørn

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