Re: attachment / yahoo issue



I sent my hosting company the header from my e-mail. I've included the
relevant "recevied lines" but xxx out any info that might compromise my
security. Below that is the e-mail response I received from my tech
support. Are they just passing the buck?
Thanks
G

Received: from 206.221.211.94 (EHLO bh1.la1.xxhostxx.com)
(206.221.211.94) by mta262.mail.re2.yahoo.com with SMTP; Fri, 09 Jun
2006 01:25:56 -0700
****
Received: by bh1.la1.xxhostingcoxx.com (CommuniGate Pro PIPE 3.5.9) with PIPE id
336413586; Thu, 08 Jun 2006 12:08:03 -0700
****
Received: from [xx.xx.xx.xx] by bh1.la1.xxhostingcoxx.com
(CommuniGate Pro SMTP 3.5.9) with ESMTP id 336413421; Thu, 08 Jun 2006
12:07:40 -0700


I've spoken with my NOC guys who deal with yahoo and here is there
response with respect to their being a 12 hour delay for the delivery::

Delays can occur because of the destination mail servers timing out,
either because of an internet connection, or because it is planned, and
in this instance that is the case. Yahoo has always been quite
aggressive with filters and therefore mail going to them has always
been anything other than rock solid. You cant blame them since it is a
free email service.

There will always be delays going to yahoo, until they change their
filtering.

As far as emails through other accounts getting through more quickly,
it's likely
that Yahoos filtering targets non-isp emails more agressively than ISP
emails. Your other account Cybermesa is a known ISP, and their filters
may treat
differently a mail sent from a website mail server (mail servers are
where spam is generated from. ISP's don't allow the sending of spam -
they institute max recipients, max sizes and other methods that limit
what and how a user can send... Our mail servers do not restrict what
and how much can be sent, Yahoo knows this so they look at mail from
such sources with greater scrutiny)

As to the actual specifics of how Yahoo filters and targets, you would
need to contact yahoo directly. We can only make educated and fairly
informed guesses.

Additionally the path from the mail server to Yahoo is different from
the path takes, so it's very very difficult to compare. Different
networks, different
paths, different things going on from one moment to the next.

In short, the delivery on the email headers you sent timed out as did
the the following 2 attempts (attempts are made every four hours up to

4 days). The fourth attempt was successful and the mail was delivered.


AK wrote:
Grip wrote:

Whenever I send an e-mail with an attachment from my email account to a
Yahoo address, it takes 1-2 days to show up in the recepient's inbox.
Only Yahoo, only with an attachment, and only when sending through my
domain name. It doesn't get spam blocked it just takes a really long
time to arrive.

My hosting company says they have no idea why or how that could be
happening.

Any ideas?

G

Hmm.

Without the header information it is impossible to answer your question.
The three entities that can be at fault are your the firm through whom
you send the message, the receiving (yahoo) or you (if you only queued
the message, but did not actually send it)


One way to determine the cause for the delay is to look at the full
message headers and see between which hopes (mail server to mail server)
the message was delayed. once you see where the mailing was delayed you
could proceed with dealing with the entity.

AK

.


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