Re: Why do so few mail providers support Port 587?

From: (no name) (no email)
Date: Tue Mar 01 2005 - 09:43:19 EST

  • Next message: Bill Nash: "Re: High volume WHOIS queries"

    On Tue, 01 Mar 2005 09:18:19 EST, Nils Ketelsen said:

    > 2. Port 587 Mailservers only make sense, when other Providers block
    > port 25. My point is: If my ISP blocks any outgoing port, he is no longer
    > an ISP I will buy service from.

    That's not when you need a port 587 server...

    > Therefore I do not need a 587-Mailserver,
    > as I do not use any ISP with Port 25-Blocking for connecting my sites or
    > users.

    Port 587 is for when you take your laptop along to visit your grandparents,
    and they have cablemodem from an ISP that blocks port 25. Now which do you do:

    1) Whine at your grandparents about their choice of ISP?
    2) Not send the mail you needed to send?
    3) Make a long-distance (possibly international-rates) call to your ISP's dialup pool?
    4) Send it back to your own ISP's 587 server and be happy?

    (Hint - there's probably a good-sized niche market in offering business-class
    mailhosting for people stuck behind port-25 blocks - they submit via 587/STARTTLS
    and retrieve via POP/IMAP over SSL).




  • Next message: Bill Nash: "Re: High volume WHOIS queries"





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