It's a rare day when I differ with Dave over mail standards, so something's weird. Dave Crocker wrote:
Some current choices:
Email standards provide for posting of email to the usual port 25 or to port 773 for the newer "submit" service. (Submit is a clone of SMTP that operates on a different port and is permitted to evolve independently of SMTP, in order to tailor posting by originators, differently from server-to-server email relaying.) There is also a de facto standard for doing SMTP over SSL on port 465, although this collides with the IANA assignment of that port to another service.
The submission port, according to IANA is 587. I'm not a fan. I also think experience has shown that it is POSSIBLE to protect port 25 appropriately. It's just a matter of doing it... See http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers
Standardized SMTP authentication uses the SMTP Auth command or the SASL service within SMTP. It can also use the de fact "POP hack". All 3 of these mechanisms are inline -- as part of the posting protocol -- so that they work over whatever port is being used for posting.
Standardized privacy for SMTP uses SMTP over SSL or it uses SMTP with SASL. SASL can be used on any SMTP or Submit port. SSL can only be used on port 25 if the SMTP service is not available to other SMTP servers for relaying (or, really, for last-hop SMTP delivery).
Although Dave is correct about SSL, RFC 3207 discusses the use of TLS for purposes of encryption AND authentication. I use this for my own sendmail. The biggest problem is ensuring that appropriate certificates are installed. Most of the common MUAs I tested have a way to do it, but it's messy (to say the least). Eliot