I also got some servers blacklisted at SORBS because they were on
alleged "dynamic" ranges. This is because in Europe, the RIPE (and ISP)
doesn't report (correctly) dynamic and static addresses. To get removed
from SORBS, you just need a PTR record referring to your domain
(preferably equal to HELO and MX) with a TTL of at least 86400, then go
to their website and ask to be removed.
Anyway, IMHO, SORBS is not a list to use to blacklist people, there are
just way too many errors.
W B Hacker wrote:
> Stephen Gran wrote:
>
>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2006 at 07:52:59PM -0400, kent stand said:
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> Currently one of the IPs I am using on a server (which the hostname happens
>>> to resolve to, and is the main IP) has been listed in a SORBS dynamic IP
>>> list, so I need to change it. The IP is static, but for various reasons,
>>> SORBS is being stubborn about a TTL on the PTR.
>>>
>>> What I'd like to do is change the IP that exim sends mail on so that the
>>> mail is no longer improperly blocked.
>>>
>>> According to this Spec:
>>> http://www.exim.org/exim-html-4.50/doc/html/spec_30.html I should be able to
>>> do this under "interface", but I'm still a bit cloudy about what exactly to
>>> do. Am I making this more complicated than it needs to be? How exactly can I
>>> go about changing this IP or hostname that Exim uses?
>>
>> In the router that defines remote deliveries, add the line:
>> interface = ip.ad.dr.es
>
> ... and invest some effort into ID'ing and fixing whatever it was that caused
> SORBS to BL your initial IP, *before* you activate the new one, else you may
> just get the new one listed as well.
>
> PTR TLL aside, if your provider has given you a fixed-IP within a block
> otherwise 'allocated portable' there may not be much you can do.
>
> Bill
>
>