Mail service go poof
Annoying; my main email host suddenly decided to ignore the catch-all email address and so all mail to it started bouncing.
The catch-all address had been a mixed blessing in the past month or two, with dictionary attacks flooding the place with spam; however, it had been useful to send all mail to a script that would filter stuff marked by the SpamAssassin that the host automatically sends stuff through to a special box and that would let me configure recipients and filter things more easily; it also let me make up addresses on-the-fly to give to websites, for example.
I've set up workarounds for some of my most-used aliases (including the one that pne@lj forwarded to), but they're not filtered now... meh. And some mail will still get dropped on the floor.
I know that I had been considering dropping the catch-all feature and only configuring specific aliases... but having the forced on me so suddenly was not fun. And I'm a bit wary of having the existing forwarder workarounds configured to filter mail by passing it to a script (by forwarding to |/path/to/script instead of to email.address@example.com), since I'm not sure whether I'll be able to edit or delete such rules later on... the web-based admin console the host uses is badly programmed and doesn't escape regex metacharacters properly, last I checked, so it won't find things containing, say, | or +.
I suppose the real solution would be to get a box of my own, where I can set up Exim (or whatever) in more detail to accept, reject, and filter, but I'm a bit loath of the expense, both in money (for a co-located box, or even a share in a user-mode Linux lace) and the time to admin my own machine. (I'm not even sure I have all the skillset for a mail admin, let alone a general-purpose one.)
Edit Oh hey thar it's started working again. I haev spam again woot. Or something.
Now to consider whether to delete my forwarders again and filter everything through the script behind the catch-all alias. Not now, though.
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Thanks for the offer!
I'll keep it in mind, and possibly see whether it's even possible -- the mail domain in question is newton.digitalspace.net, i.e. a subdomain, and I'm not sure whether they'd delegate a subdomain to someone else's server or let me put in MX records for a different host.
(Again, some decisions come back to bite me -- using that was cheaper since I didn't have to register a domain, but it'll probably be nearly impossible to migrate if I should decide to change web hosters.)
that's got spamassassin on and is pretty good at catching spam (I get maybe one a week that it doesn't pick up and then I just alter the rules to make sure it gets that next time)
That sounds good. I have no idea whether it's possible to train the SpamAssassin config that digitalspace.net uses.
The only problem I've found is that AOL have a policy of not accepting mail sent from private mailservers, but on the rare occasion I need to send email to people on AOL, I just use my ISP's SMTP server.
Ah -- I'd only need a place to receive (and relay to me) emails; I send emails using my ISP's SMTP server already when I'm not using webmail.