On Wednesday 31 March 2004 14:39, Reuben D. Budiardja wrote: > shows his originating IP in the DUL list (whatever that is). > > But the funny thing is, this user has another email account using > another SMTP server, and when he send mail from that account it > does not trigger the RCVD_IN_DYNABLOCK rule. So I don't quite > understand it. > > So my question basically, does changing SMTP server for his account > (using his ISP SMTP server for example) help fixing this problem? > If yes, why? if the rule looks at the originating IP instead of the > SMTP, any SMTP server that he uses will still trigger the rule, > won't it ? And why does his other account (with different SMTP) > does not trigger that some DYNABLOCK rule? > > Any help on this will be greatly appreciated. > > RDB > -- His IP address is found in a DUL, (Dial-Up List), or a DYNABLOCK (Dynamic IP Address Block) List. One of his ISP's smtp servers may have an IP address that's in a listed block of dial-up or dynamic IP addresses. From what I've read, it happens quite a lot that some ISP's servers get listed, erroneously, as a dynamic IP address. Regards, Mike Klinke -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list