I called them, and they were not sure what it was, and even asked a higher level, and still did not know where or how to adjust this. There are a number of timer or duration values specified directly in the Start of Authority SOA record for any zone but we are likely discussing the actual expiry value.
If you are paying peanuts you can only afford to hire monkeys. It is godaddy, I tried to contact them about it, neither the gal on the phone, or the person she put me on hold to speak with knew what it was, or how to adjust it.
I thought it was something I would adjust with them, but then they didn't know, so I just stopped looking. If you PM me with the domain name in question I can have a look at it and see if anything is really out of whack, perhaps the tool you used is just being too fussy. If I do find something off about it that the tool really has something to complain about , I'll explain the implications, etc.
Of course I won't get to it tonight, time for bed in my part of the world :. When you look under Nameservers , you will see something like NS COM , NS Settings on these servers require the highest security and access control.
I doubt we will convince Go Daddy otherwise to change their configuration. As I have thought about this issue, Go Daddy probably has it "right". Reason: if a DNS record goes stale and no longer has a correspnding online resource, would you want your customers to get something like, "Page not found" or "Service is unavailable"?
Regarding the "spammyness" of email, I do not think this value holds much credibility. There are many other settings to be concerned with. Here are some to look into:. Learning about these DNS records and email server configurations will go a long way to reducing the "spammyness" of your email. Hotmail, Gmail, AOL and others can still be pretty tough when it comes to delivering 3rd party email to their clients' inboxes. Even when you perfect the list above, you still may have to go to each provider and "request clearance" from delivering email to inboxes without hitting the Junk Mail folder or perhaps not being delivered at all.
The SOA set to is minimum default. Unfortunately our own DNS control panel has no direct control over this value as it's a server side setting. If you know the mail provider marking the messages for SPAM, you might also want to try reaching out to their general support for more information.
They'll generally require a copy of the original email sent out as an attached file to review and point out other factors that could be flagging the mail. That shows that among other that your primary DNS server is ns. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more.
Asked 5 years, 1 month ago. Active 5 years, 1 month ago. Viewed 24k times. Improve this question. Whip Whip 1 1 gold badge 2 2 silver badges 8 8 bronze badges. What dns server are you using? Normally the SOA details are defined in the zone file or equivalent type file for your server. I'm not sure. I haven't configured any DNS servers. Can you find it out with my domain?
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