(no title)
jks
|
1 year ago
Yes, but the process of getting Gmail, Outlook etc to receive your emails and put them in recipients' inboxes is far from painless or quick. An IP address with a clean history and SPF/DKIM/DMARC are table stakes, but then you get to play the "my emails are randomly dropped today while everything looked fine yesterday" game.
dizhn|1 year ago
Biganon|1 year ago
zimpenfish|1 year ago
At 25+ years of hosting email through multiple hosting providers, this has been my experience multiple times. To be fair, happening less often with DKIM et al, but those are relatively new inventions.
grepfru_it|1 year ago
Worked for a company self hosting famous brand emails. They would get blocked too. Imagine telling the band manager of a famous classic rock band that their email to their label was being rejected due to being black listed for spam.. (cc’ing the managers team)
Stop fooling yourself, it does not work fine. If it did you would not rely on that google outlook or yahoo account
dizhn|1 year ago
tracker1|1 year ago
Getting a dedicated server with an ISP that does a decent job at keeping their IP blocks clean for email is about the best you can expect. Setup the appropriate SPF/DKIM/DMARC and get along. There's really not too much more to be done these days. Even the big guys don't always get along.
Joel_Mckay|1 year ago
Almost all cloud providers with dynamic-load ephemeral IPs will show up on ban lists eventually due to vulnerability scanners, bad spiders, and spam/voip drops. However, it is far more common for Spamhaus free tiers to quietly go sideways when no one is looking.
Gmail/Outlook have their own peer policies that serve their own business posture. Google does require administrators register in their clown system as a user to exchange email, but it is effective policy that adds nuisance cost to people spinning up 30 servers a day to spam people.
Firewall Rate-limits are effective on small single-domain servers. A modern email server in Go that is isolated from each user space greatly simplifies the possible setups. =3
dwedge|1 year ago