Sam Varshavchik writes:
Alessandro Vesely writes:
Spammers just use typical addresses (e.g. sales@yourdomain).
Also, many people give away what they believe to be a fancy address,
but may actually match some aliasing criteria at the domain.
In addition, some spammers, after giving a wrong sender address,
also require a DSN that will thus bounce to postmaster's box.
What would you suggest? I'd be tempted to build a white list for DSNs.
I suggest that you shold stop worrying about it. If you set up a typical address, such as sales@, it will get harvested whether DSNs are sent, or not. It doesn't matter. It's a red herring.
Perhaps you're right. Spammers also send html messages that include
references with an ID, a different technique to get the same result,
which I also don't know how to defeat.
Ale


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