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Groups > comp.protocols.dns.bind > #15715

Re: DoH plugin for BIND

From Chuck Aurora <ca@nodns4.us>
Newsgroups comp.protocols.dns.bind
Subject Re: DoH plugin for BIND
Date 2020-05-02 13:38 -0500
Message-ID <mailman.339.1588444709.942.bind-users@lists.isc.org> (permalink)
References (7 earlier) <20200502093032.09f4b5cf@ime1.iment.local> <dbcfcbfc-c092-88fe-f6ba-7cedfa45127d@nixmagic.com> <alpine.DEB.2.21.2005021216380.10756@pannier.local> <a5d80b89-e67e-d9dd-2ee6-0847e092f5c9@nixmagic.com> <8c61335798327e8f3f57875bee5d3168@nodns4.us>

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On 2020-05-02 11:32, Michael De Roover wrote:
> Interesting, I wasn't aware of that. Until now I subscribed to the
> whole business-only IP idea the whole time. I never thought that ISP's
> or other mail servers would allow this (though granted, mine doesn't
> discriminate either). Meanwhile Microsoft still blocks one of my
> sender IP's (e3.nixmagic.com which was the last one to enter the set
> of edge servers). Maybe phasing out my edge servers wouldn't be a bad

[ Reply-To: set because we're veering even further off topic ]

You might be surprised to hear this, but it's worth your time to talk
to Microsoft about that.  I have found numerous times over several
years that Microsoft's postmaster desk is staffed by real humans who
respond in a timely manner, and better yet: they seem to be truly
interested in helping their users communicate via email.

> idea then, at least in the long run. My ISP doesn't change the IP
> address for my residential connection as long as I don't reboot my
> router anyway. Assuming that I check whether my ISP allows 25 in- and
> outbound first, that could work.

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Re: DoH plugin for BIND Chuck Aurora <ca@nodns4.us> - 2020-05-02 13:38 -0500

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