On Thu, 28 Aug 2003, Stephen J. Wilcox wrote:
I just looked on their website to file a complaint and ask how they determined what was dynamic and what was static and couldn't find a contact email address. I did find the following statement: "AOL's mail servers will not accept connections from systems that use dynamically assigned IP addresses."
It was on the following page: http://postmaster.info.aol.com/standards.html
Whoa.. thats crazy. Obviously its an effort to stop relay forwarding from cable modem and DSL customers but there are *lots* of legitimate smtp servers sitting on customer sites on dynamic addresses.
I've numerous customers I can think of straight away who use setups such a MS Exchange on dynamic addresses where they poll POP3 boxes and send their own SMTP!
...and I can think of alot of servers that will BL those customers. DUL blacklists are very commonly used. However "legitimate" these MS Exchange servers are, they'd better get a static IP if they want to avoid problems with many recipients. My guess is that since many of the BL's are being DDoS'd. perhaps AOL came up with their own, possibly out of date DUL-type BL... James Smallacombe PlantageNet, Inc. CEO and Janitor up@3.am http://3.am =========================================================================