Hi Michael,

That and S3140 indicates that your traffic is being throttled.
>
> You could try slowing down your delivery rate to not trip the breakers.
>
>
>
> That’s all I can say.
>

As an example, we had a customer with a tiny amount of outbound email
headed to Microsoft controlled mail servers (all emails sent from their own
server, with their own IP - i.e. these are the only emails sent to
Microsoft from that IP in the time period):

Oct  7 17:47:59
Oct  8 15:53:18
Oct 14 06:01:00
Oct 17 14:42:43
Oct 20 17:05:27
Oct 21 13:05:12
Oct 21 15:06:11
Oct 22 13:46:35
Oct 23 20:15:57
Oct 24 17:18:24 Please contact your Internet service provider since part of
their network is on our block list (S3150).

Since this is already low volume, how can this be throttled to avoid
tripping S3150 blocks?

If they were sending hundreds or thousands of emails per hour (or changing
between low and high(er) volume) then sure it's obvious how to change
behaviour, but single digit emails per day shouldn't "randomly" trigger a
rate limit block? What are we missing?

The above outbound mail rate looks fairly constant to me.

Regards,
Damien

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