My understanding is that the Precedence header is an arbitrary
convention and IS NOT required as defined by any RFC. Apparently,
Eric Allman (author of Sendmail and the original *nix vacation
program) created it as a means of identifying which messages his
vacation autoresponder should not respond to.

As with many things good and wonderful, SPAM broadcasters are
ruining the usefulness of such a header comment. (What spammer in
their right mind willingly identifies their spam as spam?) Many
anti-spam filters automatically flag anything with the following
headers:

   Precedence: list
   Precedence: bulk
   Precedence: junk

So, if it weren't for spam, these would be useful. But some list
sending applications, like Listserv, haven't implemented this as
a feature because they are non-standard. Lyris doesn't require
the precedence header, but you can add it if you want.

This is the only relevant comment I could find from the RFCs:

    Precedence: Non-standard, controversial.

    Sometimes used as a priority value which can influence
    transmission speed and delivery. Common values are "bulk" and
    "first-class". Other uses is to control automatic replies and
    to control return-of-content facilities, and to stop mailing
    list loops.

   RFC 2076
   Common Internet Message Header Fields
   http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2076.html

Regards,

Rich.
--
Richard Tatum
Website manager for Christianity Today International
   email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   web:    christianitytoday.com
   aol im: richtatum

             �The flood of careless, unconsidered, cheap words, is the
              greatest enemy of the profound word� �Stephen L. Talbott

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