I have the following two tests in my global.cfg (along with others)

HELOBOGUS       helovalid       x       x       6       0
IPNOTINMX       ipnotinmx       x       x       0       -3
REVDNS          revdnsexists    x       x       7       0
NOLEGITCONTENT  nolegitcontent  x       x       0       -8

Yet this piece of mail did come though with a very low rate and didn't
fail the HOLOBOGUS ?

Received: from fament.com [63.165.214.42] by imail.fament.com with ESMTP
  (SMTPD32-8.03) id AD019930280; Sat, 22 Nov 2003 19:27:29 -0600
Received: from DJQ92P11 [192.168.123.124] by fament.com with eSMTP; 
        Sat, 22 Nov 2003 19:27:21 -0600
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
From: "ryan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
X-Tests-Failed: IPNOTINMX, REVDNS.
X-Note: Total spam weight of this E-mail is -2.

By default everything supposed to be -11 on a "good" e-mail.

63.165.214.42 is NOT a valid MX record for fament.com

Wouldn't helobogus add it's weight to it ? Or have I miss understood
the helobogus test ? How can I punish servers that try claim be from
my domain like the above ?

And how could the score end up at -2 ? What is the math behind it.
The -3 and -8 in the 6th column are the only - I have in that column
anywhere. So if it's -8 + 7 then shouldn't the weight be -1 and not -2
? But most important how can I "punish" servers that claim to be
fament.com if they are not ?

Best regards,
 Eje "Aya" Gustafsson                 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Family Entertainment Network      http://www.fament.com
Phone : 620-231-7777                  Fax   : 240-376-7272
            - Your Full Time Professionals -
        Online Store http://www.wisp-router.com/
 MikroTik, Star-OS, PACWireless, EnGenius, RF Industries
-- 

-- 
[This E-mail scanned for viruses by Declude Virus]

---
[This E-mail was scanned for viruses by Declude Virus (http://www.declude.com)]

---
This E-mail came from the Declude.JunkMail mailing list.  To
unsubscribe, just send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and
type "unsubscribe Declude.JunkMail".  The archives can be found
at http://www.mail-archive.com.

Reply via email to