On Mon, 06 Jan 2003 14:38:09 EST, Doug <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > I believe the answer to your first question is you would send mail > using > your own mail server not someone else's. Although...I do see unique > issues > involved in people using mail servers that are not part of their > network > (hotmail, yahoo...) to send email if they try to authenticate you as > part of > their network before allowing you to send email. You're still missing the point.
How do you tell the difference between: 1) The IETF mail server sending for the IETF list. 2) The large SUN box across the hall that's the main vt.edu mail server. 3) My laptop. Currently, my laptop will send directly to the destination. The problem is that although it would be trivial to change it so that it uses the central Virginia Tech mail hub, that doesn't fix your problem - there's still no authenticator for the vt.edu mail server at your mail server either.... Oh, and don't even suggest chasing MX records - the MX for vt.edu points at one set of boxes, but you will almost certainly *NOT* get a connection from them, as our outbound servers are at different addresses. And no, we won't change this unless you first manage to get hotmail.com and aol.com to not use different inbound and outbound addresses first, as they do the same thing for the same reasons. -- Valdis Kletnieks Computer Systems Senior Engineer Virginia Tech
msg09908/pgp00000.pgp
Description: PGP signature