>>>>> "Rob" == Rob McGee <r...@nodns4.us> writes:
> On 12/3/2022 9:37 AM, John Stoffel wrote: >>>>>>> "Jim" == Jim Popovitch <jim...@domainmail.org> writes: >> >>> On Fri, 2022-12-02 at 11:36 -0500, John Stoffel wrote: >>> I check, but I find my IP for mail.stoffel.org in the UCEPROTECT-3 >>> spam list. Nothing I can do about it. >> >> >>> I doubt that many sites block by using UCEPROTECH-3 alone, but you can >>> use www.whitelisted.org to be excluded from it. >> >> I'm not going to pay those scum to get my IP whitelisted, that's just >> blackmail. How does paying some extortionate third party make my >> email problems go away? > Like Jim said, it's very unlikely that a UCEPROTECT listing would be the > cause of any delivery problems. Do you have some evidence that your > target site (charter.net?) is using UCEPROTECT for blocking? > If so, please share that evidence. If not, assume your listing has > nothing to do with your problem. It surely does not. I'm not sure honestly, and charter isn't saying. I was on a chat with a 1st level support guy for over an hour, and each time he came with an RBL to check, or some other setting, I was able ot show that my IP/hostname was clean, without any entries. The only entry I could find was in the UCEPROTECT-3 list, which blocks entire chunks. So now my option is to setup a special transport which would be used to submit emails to charter.net, but now I need to setup a milter because I need to replace the From: *@stoffel.org with From: jstof...@charter.net Reply-to: *@stoffel.org so that it all gets handled nicely. It's not a critical need, but it's an opportunity to learn how to write a milter and how to tie it into just a specific transport for outgoing emails. I don't want/need a full fledged mailman like setup either. John