This may or may not be happening in your case, but something to look for is an "innocent bystander." We had a case where AOL was blocking messages based on a URL in a list member's signature line. Here's what I wrote to the owner of that list: Someone is posting a URL (and that post has probably also been quoted multiple times). The URL in question is probably hosted on the same server as another site that's the target of a phishing attack or similar. For example: http://malicious-site.com is hosted at a hosting company along with a lot of other sites. The host has IP address 1.2.3.4. Thus, 1.2.3.4 winds up on a blacklist. So http://i-am-a-good-site.org, hosted by the same company, gets blacklisted as well. If that second URL appears in the body of a post, it will be blocked by AOL. There is nothing we can do about this, as is the case with almost every AOL issue. Hope that helps, -Andy -- Andy Smith-Petersen System Administrator IT Network Services University of Southern Maine http://usm.maine.edu/~andysp Jan Guthrie wrote: > The other "new" problem we have been having with AOL lately ......... > > The list that I manage is a "dog list". And with all the food > recalls lately, multiple weblinks with info about the recall have been > posted. > > AOL is "rejecting for content" certain messages. We have no way to > isolate which specific messages are being rejected. It just shows up > in the error summary each day. I have gone back through all the > messages for a couple of the days, and found no obvious weird URLs. > Just CNN, MSNBC, Menufoods, etc. > > So our AOL listers are missing possibly important info. And the > second frustrating part is when you tell the list about the problem > ... some of the AOL subscribers rush to the defense of AOL ... > swearing that they are missing nothing and AOL is wonderful. > > And of course AOL will give us no clues. > > Is there anyway to isolate the rejected messages to see what AOL > considers to be the problem? > > Jan Guthrie - OES-L >