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Tom wrote: > Maybe the absence of SPF records for most domains relayed through > DynDNS's Mailhop makes their relay appear like an open relay from AOL's > perspective? AOL /could/ behave that way but I'd hope DynDNS has a sufficiently good technical relationship with them to prevent such blockage. Like most similar providers, their Mailhop service is limited to a certain number of messages sent per 24-hour period (a really low number, by AOL standards or even by the standards of the website I most recently managed--that one was 800,000 per day). So even if something truly went haywire at a DynDNS customer site, they are protected against open-relay status. DynDNS does provide templates for SPF records and I assume that if you buy DNS through them (I don't), they are applied automatically. Their setup FAQ includes the info so years ago I set up my own thus: pioneer.ci.net text = "v=spf1 mx a:outbound.mailhop.org ip4:76.24.16.5 ip4:76.24.16.109 ip4:204.13.248.71/28 include:outbound.mailhop.org include:comcast.net ~all" Sometimes I wonder if it matters that I use a tilde instead of a dash in mine...maybe some remote mailers care. -rich
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