> From: Aleksandr Miroslav > I have one domain that I use for my wife's family. Let's call it > family.example.org. I have 6 lists on family.example.org. The largest of > these have 7 people on it, the rest are about 3-4 people. > > The 7 member list is the main one we use to keep in touch with my wife's > family. Of the 7 members, 6 have GMail accounts, and the 7th is me, it is > my personal email, using my own domain. > > A few months ago, I found that whenever I sent email from my personal email > address from my own domain, to this list, GMail would block it. Here is the > message I saw in the mail logs: > > Feb 13 16:59:35 MAILSERVER.COM <http://MAILSERVER.COM> > postfix/smtp[50738]: F12BC497E6B: host gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com > <http://gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com>[64.233.160.26] said: 421-4.7.0 > [IPADDRESS 15] Our system has detected an unusual rate of 421-4.7.0 > unsolicited mail originating from your IP address. To protect our 421-4.7.0 > users from spam, mail sent from your IP address has been temporarily > 421-4.7.0 rate limited. Please visit 421-4.7.0 > https://support.google.com/mail/?p=UnsolicitedRateLimitError > <https://support.google.com/mail/?p=UnsolicitedRateLimitError> to 421 4.7.0 > review our Bulk Email Senders Guidelines. xxxxx.53 - gsmtp (in reply to end > of DATA command)
Perhaps someone on that list uses "this is spam" button instead of the "delete" button in Gmail's web-interface. Inconceivable for tech people like us, but happens in real life. I had feedback loop messages from yahooMail about my messages to [Exim-users] mailing list and from mail.ru (a large Russian free email) about my private replies to privately emailed to me questions. _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list [email protected] https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop
