Not exactly answering your question, but when an organisation has their
own server, they should ideally receive email via an SMTP Mail feed (on
a static address). POP3 should ideally only be used for a client (like
Outlook) to retrieve mail from the server.

The reason for this is as soon as an email reaches a POP box its SMTP
envelope it lost, and with it the true intended recipient of that email.
This mainly causes a problem with mailing lists where the intended
recipients address it not contained within the POP3 headers.

Another thing I have come across when using a catch all account destined
for another server is that with the amount of mail that can build up,
the box can often become blocked causing a bottleneck when downloading
the email.

In answer to your actual question, there is a similar program to what
you already use called EFS (www.chimera.co.nz). Very basic and simple,
with the standard version being free. From what you say the problem is
with Imail running the DNS check, in which case I don't think it would
matter what POP3 Batch download program you used? 

I'm only looking at Imail v8 now, prior to upgrading my production
server so not yet sure what whitelists you can setup. I'd have thought
that would be the answer though.

Regards,
Lyndon.


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