They Blocked My SMTP, Now What?
mindsuck asks: "As of this Wednesday, my ISP blocked my port 25, leaving my mailserver useless to the outside world as a consequence of spammers and their nasty worms. So I decided to ask the nice people of Slashdot. What can I do now to restore my smtp service, besides changing ISPs, is there a obscure way to run a mailserver off a non-standard port? What about services similar to those provided by dyndns.org for this kind of situations? Pros and Cons of using this services? Should I move my MX to a more 'stable' server than my homegrown one?" This topic was last touched upon in this article, from 2002. It's been over a year since SMTP blocks have become commonplace. Have you noticed a slowdown in your SPAM? Are ISP SMTP blocks really helping the problem? Updated: It looks like Charter is also blocking SMTP. Might there be a way to work with your ISP to get them to unblock port 25 for you, if you can sufficiently satisfy them that you are not a spammer?
Krondor wrote in with a similar query: "Charter Communications (in my area) has blocked outbound SMTP connections. I need to be able to send Email to other SMTP servers, besides theirs, for a number of legitamate reasons. My question is this; How can I either still send SMTP to the places I need to, or how can I convince Charter to unblock outbound SMTP (I can understand blocking inbound SMTP without ACK bit set)? They do provide a relay, but won't my messages get labelled as SPAM if I use that? I am also concerned because, this relay is not encrypted with SSL and I don't necessarily trust Charter with that."
... and then use a smarthost (another box that sends mail on your behalf) to send the mail for you. I haven't heard of anyone blocking SMTP-SSL.
.... but if you got a few buddies with your own mailservers you can chip in on one on a host somewhere, or find a trustworthy friend that will let you relay.
This sucks because you need a box outside your network to do this
Not the perfect solution but you at least get _some_ semblance of control.
and be sure to let them know exactly why you are leaving when you cancel your account.
One thing I'm doing as a backup to my main connection is (everybody get ready to cringe) UUCP over TCP port 540. It's an easy config in the Unix/Linux world with Taylor UUCP. Sendmail handles it fine. No, no bang paths-- just plain domain names.
This would be a workaround for a problem on incoming mail. In my case, my primary MX record points to my mail server, and my secondary MX points to my UUCP relay site (bungi.com). If a sender can't connect to me, they go to the secondary where it queues. I run an hourly UUCP poll over TCP, which picks up anything waiting. If my main connection went down or were blocked, I could retrieve incoming mail with any generic PPP dial-up account.
I know, sounds kludgy, but it works fine.
This would work as a workaround for outgoing blockage also, but it would be much easier to use your ISP's outgoing mail server.
My son's 5th grade teacher actually assigned them "write a limerick about a planet". I'm not kidding.