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- --On Thursday, November 16, 2006 22:21:45 -0800 Josh Berkus
<josh@agliodbs.com>
wrote:
> Marc,
>
>> > Since those having @postgresql.org accounts shoudl be limited to these
>> > two lists, can anyone comment on a) is this a bad idea? and b) would they
>> > be affected because they don't use SMTP AUTH and c) why aren't you using
>> > SMTP AUTH? ...
>>
>> I send SMTP from literally dozens of different IP addresses through
>> josh@postgreSQL.org due to having my laptop on wireless with me wherever I
>> go. How will this work?
>
> Or more to the point: I don't understand what SMTP AUTH is. Googling for a
> definition leaves me unenlightened. Can some one explain how it works?
All our mail servers (@hub.org) are closed relays ... you can't send email
through them *unless* you use SMTP AUTH to authenticate yourself as being a
legit user ...
I don't know what mail reader you are using, and they call it differently on
each, but when you setup your SMTP Server for josh@postgresql.org account
settings, there should be a check box for 'SMTP AUTH' or 'Require
Authentication for SMTP' or something like that ...
Then, when you connect to mail.postgresql.org to *send* an email, the first
thing it will do is use your josh@postgresql.org / passwd to authenticate you
as a valid user to relay through the server and allow you to send ...
- ----
Marc G. Fournier Hub.Org Networking Services (http://www.hub.org)
Email . scrappy@hub.org MSN . scrappy@hub.org
Yahoo . yscrappy Skype: hub.org ICQ . 7615664
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