I am guessing this maybe a spam filter issue on your end. We have been
in similar shoes of the sending person. We have our MX record and
domain name hosted with one company while our SDSL and IP are with
another company. One thing spam filters look at is if the reverse
lookup matches the incoming IP address. With us this isn't true, so
occasionally I have to get the receiving customer / vendor to put a
green light on mail from our domain.
Bruce Butler, IT Manager
Knappe & Koester
18 Bradco St
Keene, NH 03431
bbutler@...
p.603.355.1166
f. 603.355.2266
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 21
Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 13:52:23 -0500
From: "Todd Caughey" <caugheyt@...>
Subject: [OT] Exchange 2000 - Mail not delievered - Relaying denied?
I have an odd situation where one independant rep (and just that one)
can not get email through to us. They get a return message stating the
reason is "You do not have permission to send to this
recipient...relaying denied".
I know I have taken steps in the past to prevent our server from
relaying mail (spammer trick) but for a recipient inside our system why
would relaying be needed? Or where are permissions set to be able to
send to someone? I've never seen anything like that in Exchange. Could
it be a setting by the user (our President as it happens) in Outlook?
I have double checked our anti-spam filters and not only is the sender
whitelisted but there are no return messages (the very few we have) that
are similar at all.
Any clues where to start looking would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Todd Caughey
Harvey Vogel Mfg. Co.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
in similar shoes of the sending person. We have our MX record and
domain name hosted with one company while our SDSL and IP are with
another company. One thing spam filters look at is if the reverse
lookup matches the incoming IP address. With us this isn't true, so
occasionally I have to get the receiving customer / vendor to put a
green light on mail from our domain.
Bruce Butler, IT Manager
Knappe & Koester
18 Bradco St
Keene, NH 03431
bbutler@...
p.603.355.1166
f. 603.355.2266
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Message: 21
Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 13:52:23 -0500
From: "Todd Caughey" <caugheyt@...>
Subject: [OT] Exchange 2000 - Mail not delievered - Relaying denied?
I have an odd situation where one independant rep (and just that one)
can not get email through to us. They get a return message stating the
reason is "You do not have permission to send to this
recipient...relaying denied".
I know I have taken steps in the past to prevent our server from
relaying mail (spammer trick) but for a recipient inside our system why
would relaying be needed? Or where are permissions set to be able to
send to someone? I've never seen anything like that in Exchange. Could
it be a setting by the user (our President as it happens) in Outlook?
I have double checked our anti-spam filters and not only is the sender
whitelisted but there are no return messages (the very few we have) that
are similar at all.
Any clues where to start looking would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Todd Caughey
Harvey Vogel Mfg. Co.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]