On Mon, 2007-01-29 at 14:10 -0700, Philip Prindeville wrote: > > If they want to know where it originated, then they will have to > go through *their* logs and follow the bread-crumb trail > back to the point of origin. >
Here is an example of why that does not give enough information. AOL has a service where I (as email administrator for our domain) can get what's called a "Feedback Loop" which basically means that I get email whenever an AOL user clicks "This is spam" on email that originates from our campus. Problem is, they strip out all identifying information about the subscriber that made the complaint. Now I can *somtimes* figure out enough information from my sendmail logs to see what the problem is, but here is something that happens all the time: Mailing list has 100 subscribers, 23 of which are AOL addresses. AOL subscriber decides he doesn't want to be on the list any more so rather that unsubscribing, he just clicks "This is spam". I get the Feedback Loop email from AOL. I can see who sent the original email, and the contents of the message, but sendmail just shows me that it went to 23 aol.com addresses and I have no idea which one complained. So how do I fix that? I thought the Feedback Loop was a good feature, but all it is is an annoyance because I don't have enough information to remedy the complaint. Jim McCullars University of Alabama in Huntsville _______________________________________________ NOTE: If there is a disclaimer or other legal boilerplate in the above message, it is NULL AND VOID. You may ignore it. Visit http://www.mimedefang.org and http://www.roaringpenguin.com MIMEDefang mailing list [email protected] http://lists.roaringpenguin.com/mailman/listinfo/mimedefang

