I work at a law firm and we have several clients who use yahoo email accounts. It has recently come to my attention that yahoo considers our domain to be spam (we have our own domain). How do I get yahoo to recognize our domain as being legitimate without asking each individual client to adjust the settings in their mailbox?
Yahoo thinks my email address is spam. How do I fix this?
Many times spammers just get a new webhost, spam the heck out of thousands of people, and by the time the webhosting companies relize it it's too late. They cancel that account and buy a new one with their masses in profit.
The hosting companies dont care about you, so they just throw the IP on the next person to buy the hosting plan. You can find out if your IP is on a spam list here:
http://www.dnsstuff.com/
In general just switch IPs and setup the mmx settings with your host
Reply:Have your webmaster contact Yahoo to see if you can have their spamcop remove your domain from their spamcheck.
Also -- it could be caused by something that you have within your email that looks to Yahoos spam cop like it 'could' be something evil. I've seen attachments like contact information from MSFT Outlook get flagged as potential spam. Try what I wrote up above, it's worked for me in the past with places like Juno and even with Hotmail.
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