Heh Heh Heh Heh Heh
Since you and Charles have obviously never done this before why do you
feel qualified to comment?
Go ahead and not do this based on these logic castles you have built
that are not founded on any experience of reality. Your customers will
be suffering for a few days while you wait to get off a blacklist while
mine won't.
I have used this trick over many years while waiting for
AOL/Barracuda/etc. to pull their heads out on a de-list request. Of
course, adding a little sophistication in use helps. I ASSUMED I could
point you mules-heads in the right direction and you would use your
brains to figure out how to properly do this instead of figuring out how
to justify ass-sitting and not even trying it out.
But since your obviously too lazy to put any thought into the
technique, I don't see why I should waste my time elaborating any
further on it.
Jered, feel free to email me privately and I'll explain what you need to
do and how to set this up so that it works, if your interested.
Disgustedly,
Ted
On 6/23/2015 12:32 PM, Reindl Harald wrote:
Am 23.06.2015 um 21:28 schrieb Charles Sprickman:
One thing to keep in mind is that you may need to rotate your spare
IPs in now and then. Others can correct me, but my understanding is
that all the major email providers are going to treat an IP that
regularly sends email to them very differently than a “new” IP. You’d
essentially be starting to send from an IP that has no reputation (or
a reputation based on it’s neighbors).
and *because* you have *no* reputation you will get a bad result if it
comes to greylisting and similar spam prevention by treat a completly
new IP as suspect and hence premature rotate IP's until something bad
happened is exactly what you should *not* do