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If you haven't already use the nslookup command on a PC's command line somewhere and you may see... C:\Documents and Settings\Ken>nslookup PEN400.3cc.co.wayne.mi.us Server: ns11.attbi.com Address: 204.127.199.8 *** ns11.attbi.com can't find PEN400.3cc.co.wayne.mi.us: Non-existent domain <peezed>attbi.com is a domain name that we block as it seems to be a source of quite a lot of our incoming spam.</peezed> If I were you I'd contact your ISP and have them explain it to you. Besides reverse lookup solutions that may be blocking you, so may the attbi.com domain be blacklisted on one or may of the blacklist providers. HTH, Ken Slaugh (707) 795-1512 x118 Chouinard & Myhre, Inc. http://www.cm-inc.com/ -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Todd Kidwell Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 4:59 AM To: midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: RE: Strange email sending problem We ran into this problem last week. We could send mail to some sites (such as yahoo.com), but not others (such as excite.com). The message was the same. We never fully understood why it happened, but the prevailing theory is that some sites require a reverse DNS lookup and others don't. When coming from the AS/400, our domain was PEN400.3cc.co.wayne.mi.us. However, since this isn't registered on the internet, the address could not be validated. Our corporate (for lack of a better term) email domain is 3cc.co.wayne.mi.us and is registered on the internet. The solution (or work-around) for us was to change the SMTP domain for the users on the AS/400 to match the corporate mail server. This "masks" the e-mail to look as if it came from Groupwise instead of the AS/400. Let me know if you need more details. Thanks, Todd Kidwell (Netstar) AS/400 System Administrator (313) 224-0578 >>> "Jeff Crosby" <jlcrosby@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 04/01/04 03:39PM >>> > A few things I would be concerned about, your AS400 does not seam to > be an MX record in your domain, your IP address resolves back to a DSL > name. I would have to bet that they check email going to a phone > pretty close to make sure it is not spam. And that stuff makes it look > like spam. I gather what you are saying is there is a problem because our iSeries at 192.168.0.1 is "as400.dilgard.com" on our internal network and my email address is "@dilgardfoods.com"? Out iSeries does not have an externally routable IP address. It's behind a firewall and router. I'm dense on this stuff. If the above is what you're trying to say, you'll have to explain it in more detail. Why isn't it a problem when I email elsewhere? -- Jeff Crosby
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