Jake Vickers wrote:
> David Milholen wrote:
>> I have a customer that sent a msg with a pic attachment to a domain
>> sbcglobal.net and the recieptient replied and the subject line contained
>> the word spam in it.
>>  Also, comcast added me to a blocklist for spam.
>> What do I need to do to fix this??
>> thanks
>>   
> The first one is up to the receiving server's admin. You have no control
> over what rules/scores he uses. You need to get in contact with him/her
> and let them know what the problem is so that he can look at scoring on
> his system and decide what to do.

Additionally, the msg's headers would be useful to see, as the spam scoring
would (presumably) give an indication as to what scoring caused the tag.

> As far as the second, you'll need to contact Comcast to be removed from
> their blocklist. If I remember right they use this weird guy's blacklist
> (picture of him overweight and dressed up as an elf at a D&D convention
> or something) and to be removed from his list he charges $1000, roughly.
> 
Alternatively, you can use (as I do) a service like dyndns.org's mailhop
service for those troublesome destinations (using smtproutes configuration
file). My server at home is on a (pseudo) dynamic IP address, and I use
dydns.org's mailhop for sending to domains that blacklist dynamic addresses.
 It works very well.

-- 
-Eric 'shubes'

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