Anti-recommendation: Comcast.

Stephen Adler adler at stephenadler.com
Sat Jan 19 10:19:15 EST 2008


The way I worked my way around this problem was to buy the comcast 
business service. It's about $150 a month, I get 5 IP address and a good 
bandwidth. Since I run my business through this setup, it works for me. 
In return I have full control over all ports.

Steve.

Dan Ritter wrote:
> At about 3:17 AM on Thursday the 17th, Comcast imposed a filter on port 25
> (SMTP) inbound to my cable modem.
>
> Around mid-morning, I realized that the only mail messages I was getting
> were generated at my house. I checked my logs, verified functionality
> -- everything was working properly except inbound SMTP from external
> sources -- checked my firewall and rebooted it, just in case. Then I
> called Comcast.
>
> That took a while, of course. After four tech support people each
> listened to my problem description and then asked me to restart Outlook,
> I talked to a supervisor who told me I was a spammer and they would not
> be removing the filter under any circumstances.
>
> This morning I discovered that, in fact, this has been rolled-out across
> the country.
>
> I made arrangements to leave Comcast, of course. I've only been a customer
> of this network for ten years.
>
> The freedom to manage your own email is essential in today's legal
> environment, in which the government appears not to need a subpoena to
> read your email if a third party stores it for you. 
>
> -dsr-
>
>   


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