Hello Good People,
Please share your thoughts with me about the following issue. Our company manages a webserver that is a designer box basically. We do not have open enrolment... mostly we just host our existing clients (we are a computer consulting firm). The server is a LAMP setup. We run the latest version of DA, 1.213.
We also use a Barracuda Spam filter to cut down on the junk email. Anyway, AOL suddenly blacklisted our primary server IP address which in turn effects all of our clients... most of which have their own public IP's assigned to them on our server (in the same range).
Now for the main question... the primary server IP is assigned to a domain that isn't even utilized for anything, especially email. So, how did AOL pick up on that IP address for it's evil blacklisting purposes??? (tongue in cheek, of course)
Insight???
Please share your thoughts with me about the following issue. Our company manages a webserver that is a designer box basically. We do not have open enrolment... mostly we just host our existing clients (we are a computer consulting firm). The server is a LAMP setup. We run the latest version of DA, 1.213.
We also use a Barracuda Spam filter to cut down on the junk email. Anyway, AOL suddenly blacklisted our primary server IP address which in turn effects all of our clients... most of which have their own public IP's assigned to them on our server (in the same range).
Now for the main question... the primary server IP is assigned to a domain that isn't even utilized for anything, especially email. So, how did AOL pick up on that IP address for it's evil blacklisting purposes??? (tongue in cheek, of course)
Insight???