[exim] Exim4.66 sending all my emails to bulk, spam,junk

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Autor: Majid Khan
Data:  
A: exim-users
Assumpte: [exim] Exim4.66 sending all my emails to bulk, spam,junk
Hi all,

Still having the same problem, Yahoo is getting mails from my server in Bulk
(now I am getting the message "majidkhan59@??? R=dnslookup T=remote_smtp defer (0): SMTP
error from remote mail server after initial connection: host e.mx.mail.yahoo.com [216.39.53.1]: 421 Message from
(72.91.193.6) temporarily deferred - 4.16.50.
Please refer to http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/mail/defer/defer-06.html" )

and when I send email to hotmail it gets delivered from my mail server but I can't get it into my mailbox neither in
Inobx nor in Junk or anywhere.

Following are the things which I have done.

1) I have changed my mail server name to mailhub.webstarts.com from mail.webstarts.info.
2) IP is 72.91.193.6 when I do the reversedns it gives mailhub.webstarts.com which is Ok now.
3) I am using PHP script to authenticate with the Exim server and send email, for authentication I have created
an account on Exim as info@???. webstarts.info has MX which is pointing to mailhub.webstarts.com.
4) The PHP script is on another server and it communicates with my mail server successfully but all my mails as I said above is going into Bulk or Junk folder.
5) My IP is not listed in DNSBL or RBL.

Following is my Yahoo Bulk email's headers:

From Webstarts Sun Apr 22 23:00:39 2007
X-Apparently-To: majidkhan59@??? via 68.142.207.106; Sun, 22 Apr 2007 23:00:46 -0700
X-YahooFilteredBulk: 72.91.193.6
X-Originating-IP: [72.91.193.6]
Return-Path: <majid@???>
Authentication-Results: mta139.mail.re4.yahoo.com from=webstarts.com; domainkeys=neutral (no sig)
Received: from 72.91.193.6 (EHLO mailhub.webstarts.com) (72.91.193.6) by mta139.mail.re4.yahoo.com with SMTP; Sun, 22 Apr 2007 23:00:46 -0700
Received: from [209.18.64.141] (helo=www.webstarts.com) by mailhub.webstarts.com with esmtpa (Exim 4.66) (envelope-from <majid@???>) id 1Hfnty-0002g7-UI for majidkhan59@???; Sun, 22 Apr 2007 22:03:39 -0400
Date: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 02:00:39 -0400
To: "Majid" <majidkhan59@???>
From: "Webstarts" <majid@???>
Reply-to: Webstarts <majid@???>
Subject: Webstarts Account Activation
Message-ID: <e419612b65fb34455af8a4a17a4afa45@www.webstarts.com>
X-Priority: 3
X-Mailer: PHPMailer [version 1.73]
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Length: 761


Please help me in this regard.

Thanks.

Bill Wrote:
  >      Several tools, and it would be *really* nice if more folks would use them:


  >      First is 'host':


  >      host -v mail.webstarts.info


  >      host -v 72.91.193.6


  >      man host for the rest...



  >      next is 'dig':


  >      dig any mail.webstarts.info


  >      dig any ptr mail.webstarts.info


  >      dig @<specific dns server> any [A| MX | PTR] mail.webstarts.info


  >      man dig for the rest...


  >      Less often needed - and NOT one to be used any more than necessary - is 'whois'


  >      whois webstarts.info   (don't look for the prefixes - they are not part of a 
  >      <domain>.<tld> registraiton)


  >      whois 72.91.193.6


  >      useful if you need to now who the 'upstream' IP-block holder is, and how the 
  >      IP you have been using is allocated/re-allocated.


  >      Sometimes the provider you think is a primary holder is actually a 
  >      fourth-level-down reseller.  Or the reverse - smaller firm has been 'acquired' 
  >      by a larger one consolidating. 'Of interest' especially when the larger firm has 
  >      a bad rep and one is unexpectedly blacklisted.


  >      :-(


  >      As to RBL's - there are several websites that will check your <domain>.<tld> OR 
  >      IP against multiple lists.


  >      Do some research, *read* before use, then use sparingly and with care.



  >      W/R your DNS entries, if you are not comfortable interpreting the informaiton 
  >      returned by 'dig' and such, Google will find you sevral DNS checking sites that 
  >      spell out the status of your records. These are limited resources, and most are 
  >      not set up to allow checking every five minutes.


  >      Finally - so long as you are using Outlook, you can expect roughly 2 Spam 
  >      Assassin points even for a bare 7-bit headered message with an innocuous subject 
  >      and clean 7-bit body text.


  >      Worse yet if it is in html or one of Micros**t's proprietary formats, or (as 
  >      happens) lies about or breaks MIME encoding or Base-64 encoding.


  >      RT <several> Manuals and/or invest an hour or so of Google'ing and save yourself 
  >      back more time than you 'lose' reading.


  >      HTH,

   >      Bill



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