Greetings,
You can indeed claim that all the mail you send is comming from your
domain that your *other* telcom is hosting. The direction you take to
accomplish this will depend on how your domain is hosted. I tell you
what... the easiest... well, the most direct way to accomplish this would
be if
On Wednesday, April 13, 2005 10:03 AM [GMT+1=CET],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thankyou very very much.
>
> So i note that the biggest italian ISP doesn't support their customers
> in this kind of matters. Ok. But how can I do to resolve my problem??
> I don't know if it may con
Thankyou very very much.
So i note that the biggest italian ISP doesn't support their customers
in this kind of matters. Ok. But how can I do to resolve my problem?? I
don't know if it may concern, but my internet domains are registered
with another ISP than Telecom (interbusiness), and with th
Greetings,
I just did a little more research on this and I can tell you that you
are skrewed. :( Why, you ask? Well, the IP block you are comming from is
a *HUGE* spam operation. That is to say; *.interbusiness.it is on *every*
single *bl (*BlockList) there is. Because those managing/ owning the I
Greetings,
Just for the record, it might interest you to know that you might want
to get a domain name and run a local DNS on your box. Some ppl will block
mail comming from (*)DSL IP's. That is to say; they don't want to recieve
mail from ppl's desktop computers. Since *so* many spamming operatio
I may be a bit confused here, but in general refusal by an RBL means that
the IP in question (in this case 80.19.154.5) is in the RBL database,
meaning that the RBL thinks the IP is associated with an open relay or SPAM
in some other way. This would normally mean that you eould have trouble
sendin