If you do use it - *only* use it with multiple DNSBL lookups (I do. 
Properly balanced, it works fine). Used as a single match, SpamCop is
much too prone to false-positives for organizations with
active/uninhibited Internet usage.

BTW the header has been changed in the beta:

X-Assp-Spam-Reason: Failed DNSBL


Kevin wrote:
> Graziano wrote:
>   
>> Hello
>>
>> please ,what does this line indicate?
>>
>> X-Assp-Received-RBL: fail (bl.spamcop.net->127.0.0.2; )
>>
>> Did it fail to connect to spamcop or did the spam fail the check?
>> The email was a spam with 2 lines of text and a link.
>>     
>
> The sending mail server is listed on spamcops blacklist.
>
> I don't recommend you use spamcop.
>
> See the wiki for a breakdown of various DNSBL providers.
>
> http://www.asspsmtp.org/wiki/Dnsbl
>
> Kevin
>
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