Hi Brian, 

It does seem a bit wonky but these are journals that usually require an
expensive subscription that third world researchers can't afford. The
university of Trieste has negotiated a special deal which essentially
extends their own site license to registered users of their specially
configured www4mail web-to-email service. There may be other technical
solutions, but this one works with the existing arrangement with the
publishers of these thousands of online journals.

I'd really like to find a simple solution that allows me to leave the
rest of my server configuration untouched (we have 500 domains hosted
here and several very large mailing lists) but limit the capability of
one domain's users to send email to addresses other than the www4mail
address. 

Another thought is that we've been planning for some time to install
some type of spam protection on our server. Would it be feasible/useful
to think of doing this at the same time? 

Thanks again for your advice. 

Cheers,

Tobias

Tobias Eigen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Kabissa - space for change in Africa
http://www.kabissa.org



-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Candler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 08, 2003 9:45 AM
To: Tobias Eigen
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [courier-users] How do I limit one domain so emails can
only be sent to/from a single address?


On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 08:50:51AM -0500, Tobias Eigen wrote:
> Thanks for the response. I'm having trouble seeing how this can be 
> done on a domain basis in qmail - and was hoping there would be a 
> solution/hack based on courier.

Courier (IMAP) doesn't have any way to affect mail delivery: the message
simply appears in the Maildir, delivered by the MTA.

There is another component of the Courier system, 'maildrop', which does
filtering of mail before dropping it into the Maildir. You could try
installing this, and configuring qmail to use maildrop for delivery
instead of dropping messages straight into the Maildir.

My own preferred MTA is Exim and it's possible to configure just about
any access policy or restriction you like, if you're prepared to play
with its string expansion language.

> In case you're curious, the purpose of this unusual setup is to enable

> third world scientists and researchers to gain access to electronic 
> journal websites via email. It works well for people that have their 
> own email client, but not for those that use Hotmail or Yahoo.. Which,

> as it turns out, is a significant proportion of our users. Both of 
> these services mangle the pages delivered through our service. The 
> hope is to help these people by providing them with a simple webmail 
> interface only for accessing the journals. More info here: 
> http://www.ictp.trieste.it/ejournals/

I have some experience in doing that sort of thing (via UUCP links).

What I don't understand is, the above link seems to describe a service
which lets you retrieve web pages via E-mail. Anyone who is a
hotmail/yahoo/ sqwebmail user clearly has direct web access anyway, so
what is the benefit to them of using this gateway?

Regards,

Brian.



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