
Outbound email rejected
For years I have been sending out a weekly newsletter that includes links to things like videos made by members of our group (these are for visual choreography learning, we are a singing group). All of a sudden how my e-mails are not going through. I checked at first with my ISP and they said that it is showing that Thunderbird indicates that they think my email is spam and is now blocking it. What can I do. There is nothing mean or morally corrupt with what I am trying to send. Some of the links are for things like google.docs and google photo apps.
I had an earlier message that stated that the email was spam, but I did not get a copy of that, and now I am getting this message:
Sending of the message failed. An error occurred while sending mail. The mail server responded: <END-OF-MESSAGE>: End-of-data rejected: user has temporarily exceeded the allowed mail recipient relays per day. Please try again later.. Please check the message and try again.
Please help!
Izbrana rešitev
There seems to be two problems.
1) The message that you quoted is self-explanatory. Your e-mail service provider limits the number of messages that can be sent in a given time period in order to deter spam.
2) The server is rejecting your message because it looks like spam. There are standard actions to take to make legitimate messages look less like spam. Your e-mail service provider and a Web search should be able to provide those. Someone posted some of those actions on this forum a while ago too.
I am not aware of anything in Thunderbird that would flag an outgoing message as potential spam. As far as I know, this is always a server function.
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Izbrana rešitev
There seems to be two problems.
1) The message that you quoted is self-explanatory. Your e-mail service provider limits the number of messages that can be sent in a given time period in order to deter spam.
2) The server is rejecting your message because it looks like spam. There are standard actions to take to make legitimate messages look less like spam. Your e-mail service provider and a Web search should be able to provide those. Someone posted some of those actions on this forum a while ago too.
I am not aware of anything in Thunderbird that would flag an outgoing message as potential spam. As far as I know, this is always a server function.