Off-Prem

Channel

Microsoft blocked TSO Host's email IPs from Hotmail, Outlook inboxes and no one seems to care

Apart from the poor sods paying for the service, that is


Microsoft has blocked Brit hosting outfit TSO Host's bulk email domain, meaning anyone trying to send large quantities of mail over its infrastructure cannot deliver it to an Outlook or Hotmail address.

Irate resellers got in touch with The Reg to complain that their own customers were moaning that emails sent to any Microsoft domain were bouncing.

Those resellers were using TSO Host's infrastructure for their operations – including the hosting firm's dedicated bulk IP.

"Rather a lot of our clients have mailboxes with TSO/Paragon," reflected one. "Apparently TSO's 'senior team' have requested the removal a while ago but Microsoft aren't interested."

TSO couldn't be bothered to reply when The Register messaged them asking what was going on, despite them inviting us to do so. Microsoft is probably still rewriting Bing in the hope of seeing relevant search results that tell it what TSO Host is, but we wait with bated breath for their reply.

Messages sent over TSO Host's infrastructure to an Outlook, Hotmail or Live email address bounce. The bounce message is pretty unequivocal:

550 5.7.1 Unfortunately, messages from [195.26.90.72] weren't sent. Please contact your Internet service provider since part of their network is on our block list (S3140). You can also refer your provider to http://mail.live.com/mail/troubleshooting.aspx#errors. [VE1EUR02FT020.eop-EUR02.prod.protection.outlook.com]

TSO Host's website contains a status update from nine days ago at the time of writing, which says: "We have requested a delist from SORBS for the Daily mail IP range 195.26.90.0/24 and they have confirmed that the IP is not listed any more." [sic]

Combined with the IP address in the bounce message above, it's not looking good for TSO Host and its ability to deliver mail to Microsoft-controlled addresses.

In its status page message, TSO Host added: "We are still awaiting an update on the matter with Microsoft. Once we have information from them, we will further update."

Email issues are nothing new, though they tend to consist of ISPs overblocking potential spam messages – as infamously kept happening with Virgin Media over the past few years.

A fed-up source caustically commented: "So, as long as people with TSO mailboxes don't have any friends on Hotmail you're fine. D'oh!" ®

Send us news
50 Comments

Attorney sues Microsoft for $1.75M, claiming his email has been useless since May

Alleges he's still locked out and at risk of losing his licenses over missing comms

Microsoft's Activision fight with FTC turned up a Blizzard of docs: Here's your summary

Windows PCs in the cloud, spending Sony out of business, mobile woes, and more – and the files to read

Google formally accuses monopolist Microsoft of trapping people in its cloud

Fight! Fight! Fight!

Microsoft Azure OpenAI lets enterprises feed corporate secrets to ChatGPT

Apparently you're all dying to do this?

Users of 123 Reg caught out by catch-all redirect cut-off

Web hosting company tells users to pay up or shift off, but users say they weren't warned in time

Microsoft rethinks death sentence for Windows Mail and Calendar apps

Shifting those duties to Outlook set for next year – well, maybe

Microsoft postpones death date for personally licensed Teams Rooms hardware

The 'upgrade' is free, yet an amnesty is needed despite months of warning

This Windows update is snarling up some endpoint security tools

Malwarebytes and Trellix upgrades to the rescue

Microsoft's GitHub under fire for DDoSing crucial open source project website

A tale of emergency firewalling, a little bit of victim blaming, and workflow scripts gone berserk

Microsoft Fabric promises to tear into the enterprise analytics patchwork

Meanwhile, users are left to figure out how to cut their cloth

With dead-time dump, Microsoft revealed DDoS as cause of recent cloud outages

Previous claims its own software updates were the issue remain almost, kinda, plausible

Microsoft investigating bug in Windows 11 File Explorer that makes the CPU hangry

On the other hand, some old settings are set for a comeback