Ron McKeating wrote:
I could understand if they really were 56k modem dialup ip addresses,
but this is a ntl cable modem, the linux server sits on it 24-7 and
matches the ip address against the dns entry for my domain every hour by
cron. If the ip address changes, then the dns gets updated. Lots of
On Sat, 2004-11-27 at 13:33, Nicolas wrote:
>
> >
> > Hmmm, but I have my own domain, and I want all my email to come from my
> > domain, my isp will not route email from my domain (ntl) through their
> > mail servers, they want my to use my [EMAIL PROTECTED] account. I want to
> > use my [EMAIL
Chris wrote:
> However, I do not run a mail server, the offending msg came from the fact
> that every 4hrs I restart spamd and have the output of the crontab mailed
> to me. I also have the results of the rootkit hunter cronjob mailed to me
> daily. Is the problem caused by the fact that the m
Chris wrote:
> Jim Maul wrote:
> > Id say its because you have a dynamic ip address. You might want to
> > send all mail out through your isp's mail servers instead.
>
> All msgs do go through EL, AFAIK, here are two headers, the first from a msg
> not marked as spam, the second the headers from
Ron McKeating wrote:
Hmmm, but I have my own domain, and I want all my email to come from my
domain, my isp will not route email from my domain (ntl) through their
mail servers, they want my to use my [EMAIL PROTECTED] account.
One option, if you can't get a proper static IP, is to use a third-part
On Fri, Nov 26, 2004 at 04:18:16PM +, Ron McKeating wrote:
> On Fri, 2004-11-26 at 15:54, Jim Maul wrote:
> > Chris wrote:
> > > I was messing around with fetchmail yesterday seeing if I could get it
> > > to
> > > work for the first time. After playing with it for a few hours and
> > > se
> Id say its because you have a dynamic ip address. You might want to
> send all mail out through your isp's mail servers instead.
>
> Hmmm, but I have my own domain, and I want all my email to come from
my domain, my isp will not
> route email from my domain (ntl) through their mail servers, th
On Friday 26 November 2004 10:18 am, Ron McKeating wrote:
> Hmmm, but I have my own domain, and I want all my email to come from my
> domain, my isp will not route email from my domain (ntl) through their
> mail servers, they want my to use my [EMAIL PROTECTED] account. I want to
> use my [EMAIL P
On Friday 26 November 2004 09:54 am, Jim Maul wrote:
> >
> > I'm using Sprint DSL, not a dial-up connection. I've contacted sorbs
> > about this and am awaiting an answer. I've quit using fetchmail for
> > now. Any ideas on why this happened?
>
> Id say its because you have a dynamic ip address.
On Fri, 2004-11-26 at 15:54, Jim Maul wrote:
> Chris wrote:
> > I was messing around with fetchmail yesterday seeing if I could get it to
> > work for the first time. After playing with it for a few hours and seeing
> > that it was working I happened to notice one of my crontab messages was in
A) Is your ip dynamic?
B) Has your isp listed all it's IP as being res/dynamic? (Most, if not
all, ISP's will list their DSL/Cable ip's as being dynamic for some
reason or another (lazyness imo), my home one is listed as dynamic,
however, it's static (I paid for it) the big reason is their polic
Chris wrote:
I was messing around with fetchmail yesterday seeing if I could get it to
work for the first time. After playing with it for a few hours and seeing
that it was working I happened to notice one of my crontab messages was in
the right folder, but marked as spam. Looking at the head
On 11/26/2004 4:42 PM +0200, Chris wrote:
> I'm using Sprint DSL, not a dial-up connection. I've contacted sorbs about
this and am awaiting an answer. I've quit using fetchmail for now. Any
ideas on why this happened?
That sorbs sublist considers most cable/dsl connections as DUL.
Niek
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