So, I spent the last few days researching and then finally setting up mailcow. I got my domain name, my wildcard certificate, got all the containers up, disabled ipv6 (I don’t have it set up on my home router and am too lazy to set it up tbh), created a domain and an mailbox, etc.

Well, when testing it late last night, I found that I could receive mail but was getting timeouts when sending mail. After some googling, I found out that this will happen if port 25 is not open. Using traceroute, I found that port 25 traffic is not going outside my home network. And sure enough, I found on my ISP web site that I need to have a business account to unblock port 25, which costs twice what I am paying for internet now.

So what are my options? Is there any way around this? Do I need to host this elsewhere, such as AWS? Can I use a proxy or something that can translate it to a different port for me?

Edit: Yeah, so I just set up an alias to my existing email address. It isn’t what I wanted to do, but as many have pointed out, I’m fighting a losing battle here. :(

  • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    Pointless. Your selfhosted e-mail will just end up in spam-filters anyway.

    Sadly email federation is on its last breath and you are better off using an external service somewhere if you want your email to actually reach anyone.

    Edit: it’s not much better on VPS you can rent either.

    Edit: and in before the person that claims they have been self-hosting email for 20 years already… yes exactly! That is why yours still works.

    • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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      1 year ago

      Edit: and in before the person that claims they have been self-hosting email for 20 years already… yes exactly! That is why yours still works.

      You’re out of line, but you’re right. Lol

    • Dandroid@dandroid.appOP
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      1 year ago

      Why is this? I know my dad has self-hosted an email server for about 15 years, and he only recently started having issues with his email going to spam. He was able to get it worked out, but he said it was annoying af, and he didn’t recommend getting into it now either. I think he had to talk to Google to get some special certificate or something.

      • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        Well, your dad seems to have answered your question already no?

        Google and Microsoft are using spam as an convenient excuse to wall off their email gardens and to put insult to the injury, they are a major source of email spam these days.

    • Sifr Moja@mastodon.social
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      1 year ago

      @poVoq I only in the last year or so set-up an SMTP server for outbound only. DKIM, SPF and DMARC configured. I never have issues sending email anywhere.

      • poVoq@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        They don’t bounce when the spam filter catches them. I have seen many people claiming they have no issues sending emails just for all their emails directly go to the spam-folder in my gmail account (that I reluctantly have). Maybe ask the people you are sending the emails to? Just because you don’t immediately notice the problem doesn’t mean it isn’t there.

  • Gubb@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I can agree with everyone here, self hosting mail at this point is pointless. You are going to spend so much of your time reaching out to be pulled off of blacklists only to be added right back onto another. It’s a vicious cycle unfortunately, and than just wait until you get added to Barracudas or Proofpoints naughty list… you may as well start over at that point.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    1 year ago

    You can use a VPN or proxy but it’s pretty much guaranteed that those IPs are already wildly abused and that your emails will go straight to spam.

    At this point a VPS or cloud is indeed pretty much the best option and even then, you’ll need to let it age up for a while because AWS’s IPs are also wildly banned and give it some time to get unbanned and unban requests to go through.

  • Monkey With A Shell@lemmy.socdojo.com
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    1 year ago

    It’s possible but an archane mess of aspects to deal with. DMARK, DKIM, and SPF records are a pain to deal with.

    That said, I have a pretty consistently working mailcow set up that doesn’t need 25 (most home ISPs do block that because of spam bots taking over granny’s computer) instead it uses 587 to relay messages through mailjet at no cost since it’s only a few a month. I used another similar marketing relay before too, they all work similar. It does have the drawback of the relay having access to outgoing mail, but incoming is straight to me and not like any other online mail service couldn’t just scan your entire mailbox at will.

    Mostly used for internal system notices that dont leave local and signup valudations anyhow so there’s not much for them to gain from it.

  • Brickfrog@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    And sure enough, I found on my ISP web site that I need to have a business account to unblock port 25

    This is very common, unfortunate you didn’t realize it until now. The easiest solution to that is to upgrade your internet service to business class with static IP. But like the others said this may be futile being that all the major email providers are going to mark emails from your domain as spam (& in some cases null route those incoming emails), it takes a long time for all the major email providers to trust you.

  • covert@lemmy.cafe
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    1 year ago

    I’ll be repeating what’s said already but coming from someone who hosts his own non critical email

    VPS Either with a TCP reverse proxy back home comming in on an other port (seems most compatible with mailcow at home)

    Or hosting postfix on the vps, you could still do IMAP at home

  • Jason@lemmy.weiser.social
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    1 year ago

    You can use sendgrid to send your emails. That gets around the port 25 problem, but everyone is right - you’ll have a difficult time getting through spam filters even with them.

    I selfhost my own email mainly so I don’t have to go through the Google unsecured apps rigamarole every time I want to set up smtp for one of my services, but no one except protonmail gets it reliably.

  • tjr@innernet.link
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    1 year ago

    This is completely standard for residential ISPs at least in the US. Your options are to either host this elsewhere or use a smarthost (somewhat of a proxy) for outbound mail.