From: winsor (winsor@wi.net)
Date: Tue Jul 18 2000 - 17:43:01 CEST
As I've said I would think this may have to do with a difference in the
addresses in the header.
In this case my "domain of origin" is different than the domain of the SMTP
server I "used to use".
Although in many cases this would definately have a "spammish" smell 8^P,
such is not the case in this instance.(classic mail relay exploit so common
these days)
Funny in this day of 1 Ghz machines, these machines although very
fast are still not capable of coherent thought*LoL*
Someday maybe the software will look at the header and "think"........."hey this
guys been posting for about a year, let it go through"
winsor
On Mon, 17 Jul 2000, you wrote:
> winsor wrote:
> >
> >
> > I merely setup my mail client to use "sendmail" rather than my old ISP's SMTP
> > system while still using the PoP3 of my old ISP to receive.
> >
>
> I used this workaround, in the past, to bypass Sunsite paranoid mail
> system. It like
> to accept connections from single untrusted sendmail, but deny its
> services when
> connection comes from a regular ISP. A paradox.
>
> Michele
>
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