No problem here.
---
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]
---
[This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)]
---
This E-mail came from the Declude.Virus mailing list. To
unsubscribe, just send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and
type "unsubscribe
Is any one else having problems getting updates from the f-prot site?
I get a runtime error from the updater program, and when I go to the website
to download the updates, I get a page can not be found.
Bruce
---
[This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)]
---
Couple of things I found when we had a HDSL line. AOL and others are
blocking based on the IP address. If you have a cable internet connection,
even with IP space delegated, they will bounce the mail. Best way to solve
this is to call AOL, be prepared to wait to talk to someone, and tell them
wh
I think you jumped one hop too low and grabbed his client IP. His
server IP is 12.17.162.191 and it checks out just fine and matches his
A and MX records as well. There are no problems there.
Matt
Ncl Admin wrote:
No it isn't.
Reverse DNS for 172.16.2.103
Generated by www.DNSstuff.co
Those are private internal addresses for users and as private addresses
cannot have reverse entries. Are you saying that because we use private IP
space (as it should be done to preserve IP address space) all our emails
will be blocked by AOL and earthlink? The email server itself has a
registere
Don't know. But check the Imail logs -- AOL leaves a message with a phone
number to call when they bounce a mail.
- Original Message -
From: "Jim Matuska" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 05, 2004 12:33 PM
Subject: Re: [Declude.Virus] OT Problems with ema
No it isn't.
Reverse DNS for 172.16.2.103
Generated by www.DNSstuff.com
Country: [Private IP]
Preparation:
The reverse DNS entry for an IP is found by reversing the IP, adding it to
"in-addr.arpa", and looking up the PTR record.
So, the reverse DNS entry for 172.16.2.103 is found by looking up t
We have our own DNS servers and are providing reverse entries. Our primary
email server is enterprise.nezperce.org Is there anything in that which AOL
would block?
Jim Matuska Jr.
Computer Tech II
CCNA
Nez Perce Tribe
Information Systems
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
- Original Message -
From: "Stan
AOL recently instituted a new policy of not accepting mail from servers with
dynamic IPs. As part of that, they do a reverse DNS and look for "dsl",
"adsl","dyn", etc and block your mail if one of them shows up. We had "dsl"
in ours, given to us by our ISP, and even though it's a business DSL lin
This is a little off topic but maybe someone else
on this list has seen this. Recently every time anyone tries to send an
email to an aol account they get a message like the following:
Delivery failed 20 attempts: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
and for earthlink:
Unknown user: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Ad
10 matches
Mail list logo