QUOTE(joe @ Nov 10 2006, 02:58 PM)

<snip>
Now I am blocked from sending emails to my clients, MY CLIENTS !!, that I email on a diaily basis. Clients that I MUST be able to email on a daily basis.
<snip>
Joe,
...You may wish to rethink your strategy for communicating with your clients. Although highly reliable, internet e-mail has never been, is not now, nor is it likely to be in the near future a guaranteed delivery mechanism. Wise enterprises have alternative means of communicating with their customers.
...Also, many e-mail providers simply drop suspected spam rather than return a message to alert you that it has not been delivered. Thus, things could be much worse -- you could have
thought you were reaching your customers but not have been! Therefore, IMHO you owe a "thank you" to those clients' e-mail providers who sent you the rejection notices.
...Finally, it might, indeed,
not be a coincidence that you started being blocked only after you started reporting to SpamCop. Occasionally, people reporting via SpamCop wind up reporting their own provider. Please see SpamCop FAQ (link near top left of each Forum page) item labeled "Why does SpamCop want to send a report to my own network administrator?" for more detailed information. There are also quite a number of SpamCop Forum threads discussing this because a number of other people have had this happen to them.