- Oct 9, 2002
- 28,298
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I work for a small, local cable ISP. On Thursday, I spoke with a commercial customer with an email issue. Suddenly, all users were unable to send mail. They don't use our own email (which is hosted by Google). Their outgoing server is smtpout.secureserver.net (GoDaddy).
They all use port 80 instead of the standard 25. It appears that smtpout.secureserver.net supports both ports, but their site recommends 80.
From the customer's computer, I used telnet to connect to the server over ports 25 and 80. It connects immediately, but there's no "220" prompt. My home system is on the same ISP. When I perform the same TELNET command, I get a proper "220" response. Customer uses McAffee antivirus on all systems.
I have been out of the office until today. When I came in, another customer was having the same issue.
- Also a GoDaddy customer w/ the same outgoing server
- Also doesn't get the "220" response when using the telnet command
- One user took his laptop to his home AT&T connection and was able to send.
- Customer uses Kaspersky antivirus.
The first customer said it only started when his modem was swapped for one that has built-in wireless capability. This would have caused the public IP address to change. When they swapped back to a standard modem, the problem went away (customer would probably get the same IP they originally had). To me, it sounds like GoDaddy has blocked the IP addresses of these customers; probably after incorrect passwords attempts from a user on the network.
Has anyone else experienced anything like this?
[UPDATE]
Verified that GoDaddy was blocking the customer by IP address. When I forced the customer's IP address to change, I'm suddenly able to get a response through telnet. Outlook is able to send.
VERY strange that the last two customers I've dealt with are both being IP-blocked by GoDaddy.
They all use port 80 instead of the standard 25. It appears that smtpout.secureserver.net supports both ports, but their site recommends 80.
From the customer's computer, I used telnet to connect to the server over ports 25 and 80. It connects immediately, but there's no "220" prompt. My home system is on the same ISP. When I perform the same TELNET command, I get a proper "220" response. Customer uses McAffee antivirus on all systems.
I have been out of the office until today. When I came in, another customer was having the same issue.
- Also a GoDaddy customer w/ the same outgoing server
- Also doesn't get the "220" response when using the telnet command
- One user took his laptop to his home AT&T connection and was able to send.
- Customer uses Kaspersky antivirus.
The first customer said it only started when his modem was swapped for one that has built-in wireless capability. This would have caused the public IP address to change. When they swapped back to a standard modem, the problem went away (customer would probably get the same IP they originally had). To me, it sounds like GoDaddy has blocked the IP addresses of these customers; probably after incorrect passwords attempts from a user on the network.
Has anyone else experienced anything like this?
[UPDATE]
Verified that GoDaddy was blocking the customer by IP address. When I forced the customer's IP address to change, I'm suddenly able to get a response through telnet. Outlook is able to send.
VERY strange that the last two customers I've dealt with are both being IP-blocked by GoDaddy.
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