--On 1 April 2006 10:33:41 +0100 David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Sat, 2006-04-01 at 09:19 +0200, David Saez Padros wrote:
you need to compile and install libspf2 before compiling exim

As discussed before, however, you'd probably do better just to disable
the SPF support in Exim. It's not something you should be using to
reject mail.

http://david.woodhou.se/why-not-spf.html

--
dwmw2

But, it is potentially useful for whitelisting. If there are domains that you trust, then SPF can be used to determine whether the email is coming from their approved IP addresses. If they are, then you may be able to accept the email without spam filtering. For example, I'd be happy to accept mail without spam filtering from educational domains (*.ac.uk, *.edu) when I'm sure that the email is coming from an institutional server.

SPF may not be ideal for it's intended purpose, but that doesn't mean that it has no useful applications. Where your article says "If you use SPF, you will be causing genuine email to be rejected." instead you should say "If you use SPF _to_reject_email_, you will be causing genuine email to be rejected."

--
Ian Eiloart
IT Services, University of Sussex

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