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Thanks a lot, spammers. Thanks to your shenanigans, sending e-mail when you’re away from your usual computer, or when you’re not using your usual ISP, is harder than it ought to be. The difficulty arises because ISPs have become very stringent about the access allowed to their SMTP servers — that is, the servers that take care of sending out e-mail (as opposed to POP servers, which receive e-mail). Spammers used to get a free ride on the SMTP servers, sending out unsolicited bulk e-mail and pushing anything from get-rich-quick schemes to Viagra. Now the free ride is over: with most ISPs, only authorized subscribers actually logging into the ISP’s network can use the provider’s SMTP server.
Why does this affect you, if you’re not a spammer? Well, this situation becomes a pain if, for some reason, you happen to be using another ISP at the moment, but want to send mail from your usual e-mail account. Suppose you normally use ISP A, and your Outlook Express, Eudora, or other e-mail client has been set up to use ISP A’s SMTP server. Now, what if you’re out of town, but have access to the Internet through the friend you’re staying with (who has an account with ISP B)? You’re happy to have Net access , but this joy ends when you want to send mail from your usual e-mail account with ISP A. Because you’re not actually on ISP A’s network at the moment, you’ll very likely find that you can’t send mail using your usual e-mail client, or at least not with its usual settings. In such a hypothetical situation, you’d have to get into the settings of your e-mail program and enter the SMTP server of ISP B. What a pain!
In the past, ISPs were a lot laxer, and you wouldn’t have had the problem described above. You might be using a different ISP to dial into the Internet, but your own ISP would still let you send out mail through its SMTP sever. You might think of the past situation this way: in your own house, you use your own telephone when making calls. If you happen to be in another part of the neighborhood and need to use a phone, though, you can pop into the house of a friendly neighbor and use his phone to make that call. Today’s situation, in comparison, might be likened to a neighborhood in which there are no trusting neighbors, and nobody lets you use their phone.
Whew! What a tirade — and all of this just to briefly introduce one handy way out of this stupid SMTP situation.