I received your confirmation e-mail from "Bible Tools" (I presume this
is you) and it is surprisingly clean. The message failed no tests.
This includes hundreds of content and ip4r checks, including Spamcop,
DSBL, Monkeys, etc. In fact, your message even received a 4-point
credit for having a correct IP address in your DNS MX records. So, your
final score was a whopping "-4." Can't beat it.
I hope this is helpful.
Dave
--
David M. Delbridge
Circa 3000
ColdFusion Hosting
http://www.circa3k.com
775-832-2445
David Delbridge wrote:
>
> David,
>
> If you'll send a copy of your confirmation note to my address, I'll
> tell
> you which spam tests fail at our mail server. Please contact me
> off-list with message title and sender address to look for.
>
> Dave
>
> --
>
> David M. Delbridge
> Circa 3000
> ColdFusion Hosting
> http://www.circa3k.com
> 775-832-2445
>
> "David C. Grabbe" wrote:
> >
> > This isn't a ColdFusion issue per se...just trying to figure out if
> > other developers have run into this. One of our websites offers a
> > newsletter subscription (free), and we have it set up with an opt-in
> > procedure: they enter their email address, we send them a
> confirmation
> > email with a link that they click on to activate their
> > subscription. The technical aspects are working fine, but we are
> > finding that only a small percentage (10%-20%) of the subscriptions
> > are activated. Has anyone had a problem with their confirmation
> > emails being regarded as SPA...err, Unsolicited Commercial Email?
> Are
> > people still using this sort of confirmation process? -- as opposed
> to
> > "send an email to..." Any ideas why the confirmation rate would be
> so
> > low?
> >
> > Thanks in advance,
> > David
> >
>
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