Hi,
Jaime R. Garza wrote on 2011-03-11 16.32:
Because some E-Mail servers that receive E-Mails from other E-Mails servers
that are not verified with the proper domain, will be blocked
or classified as SPAM. At least that's my experience, I have my own domain
and when I sent E-Mails from my gmail account using my own domain E-mail,
many people told me the E-Mail was classified as spam. As soon as I
configured my domain with Google Apps, the problem was solved.
Maybe I'm wrong or I did something incorrectly, but at least that was my
experience. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
it depends. :-)
If the sending mail server is safely configured otherwise (i.e. not
blacklisted, ideally whitelisted, PTR records do match etc., the things
any postmaster has to know about), then it should be no problem, given
that two factors are met:
1. No SPF records configured, or configured with ?all
2. No DKIM records configured, or configured with (IMHO) dkim=unknown
Otherwise, mails would be classified as spam indeed. We made quite good
experience in the past: Many of us used their @openoffice.org accounts,
but there was no official SMTP server. Worked like a charm, as neither
DKIM nor SPF was configured within the openoffice.org domain name.
Florian
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Florian Effenberger <[email protected]>
Steering Committee and Founding Member of The Document Foundation
Tel: +49 8341 99660880 | Mobile: +49 151 14424108
Skype: floeff | Twitter/Identi.ca: @floeff
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