Pretend an email is addressed to one person and CC'd to 1,2,3,4, or 5
others.  The person that the email was sent directly to has already
reported a previous email with the same address as spam and the address
was added to his personal blacklist.  Looking at my log, it looks like
because the address was "personal" blacklisted by the person in the TO:
field, that person's blacklist is keeping the other people that were
CC'd from receiving the email also.  Fortunately, the email is spam
anyways and it doesn't matter (and it should ultimately be blocked
because of the SPF workaround that you showed me Fritz for
verizonwireless.com).  But there could be times when the email is only
spam to one person and not the rest (playing Devil's Advocate).  Barring
any other circumstances that might block the email, shouldn't it still
be allowed through to the addresses that were CC'd?

Here's the log entry (there were three other addresses CC'd in this
email):
Apr-30-12 10:08:28 id-33579-06879 [PersonalBlack] 187.35.155.244
<[email protected]> to: [email protected] [spam
found][blocked] -- rejected by personal blacklist:
'[email protected],[email protected]' -- [Your Bill
Is Now Available] -> spam/33579-06879.eml;
Apr-30-12 10:08:28 id-33579-06879 187.35.155.244
<[email protected]> to: [email protected] [SMTP
Error] 554 5.7.1 Mail (id-33579-06879) appears to be unsolicited -
mailbox <[email protected]> unavailable - contact
[email protected] for resolution;

Thanks,
Brett


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