Page Not Found

Error: Invalid Request

Comments

Re: AOL Fires Across the Bow of Spam-Friendly ISPs Yakov Shafranovich  –  Nov 01, 2004 5:01 AM PDT

AOl has been very progressive of all the ISPs for a long time, and a lot of the stuff they are doing is very good. For example, AOL's postmater wrote a document on port 25 blocking and it seems that they are widely promoting the idea along with allowing the SUBMIT port (587) instead. Good luck!

Reply  |  Link  |  Report Problems
Re: AOL Fires Across the Bow of Spam-Friendly ISPs Daniel R. Tobias  –  Nov 02, 2004 9:17 AM PDT

I'm opposed, myself, to ISPs blocking port 25 outbound, since many users (myself included) have legitimate reasons to use outside mail servers.  In my case, I use an e-mail address in my own domain, hosted on a Web hosting provider, and wish to use both inbound and outbound servers at that provider.

Reply  |  Link  |  Report Problems
Re: AOL Fires Across the Bow of Spam-Friendly ISPs Daniel Golding  –  Nov 04, 2004 1:50 PM PDT

Need to use an outside mail server?

That's easy to do with SMTP-Authorization running on the SMTP Submission Port, TCP port 587. This can also be accomplished by using SMTP-AUTH with TLS (aka SSL). Other alternatives include SSL and IPSec VPNs. You would be surprise how many folks support at least one of these techniques. If they don't, find a new hoster!

Closing port 25 to dynamically assigned IP addresses is an important part of the move towards accountability and authentication in email origination.

For now, you can also "smarthost" - use your own ISP's mailserver to relay out mails with altered message headers. As SPF and Sender-IF are adopted, however, this will stop working, as the difference between phishing and smarthosting is intent rather than technical.

Reply  |  Link  |  Report Problems

To post comments, please login or create an account.

Related News

Related Blogs

Industry Updates