Gerald; Ok, at 2:43 AM CST I sent an email to myself to check
the headers. It of course showed up as 2:43 PM (PM) CST in
the inbox. You can see the dates below, they seem to be an
hour off, I guess due to EST and CST....evidently BellSouth
(my ISP) is in the EST zone. The first 2 times shown are
also PM, the 3rd shows AM (although 1 hr. 2 min. off), and
the last time entry below shows the correct time. So, what
does this tell you? :) (IP's and other unnecessary things
have been deleted). I don't see how the sender can be the
problem since ALL EMAIL we receive is incorrectly stamp.
Everyone else can't be wrong. This happens on ALL, EVERY
email we receive on the domain accounts regardless of the
sender.
-----------------------
Return-path: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Envelope-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Delivery-date: Sun, 22 Sep 2002 15:43:12 -0400
for [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Sun, 22 Sep 2002
15:43:12 -0400
Received: from i9d6f4 ([]) by imf09bis.bellsouth.net
(InterMail) with SMTP id
for <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Sun, 22 Sep 2002
03:45:40 -0400
From: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:
Date: Sun, 22 Sep 2002 02:43:17 -0500
---------------------
Thanks,
-Clint
God Bless Us All
Clint Hamilton, Owner
http://OrpheusComputing.com �
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gerald E. Boyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
At 09:12 AM 9/20/2002 -0500, OrpheusComputing.com wrote the
following:
>Hi all. All email we are receiving on ALL of our domain
>accounts is 'stamped' 12 hrs. in the FUTURE. As it arrives
>in OE, the date shown is what is 12 hrs in the future. ALL
>email received on my ISP is fine. The PC clock is set ok,
>and this is also happening on other computers here. I have
>been waiting on a reply from my webhosts about this and they
>are ignoring it. I assume this is a problem with the
>webservers having the AM/PM switched and nothing I can do?
Check all Received header fields to verify the date and time.
The Date
header specifies a date (and time), normally the date the
message was
composed and sent. The MUA (Mail User Agent) is the program
that adds the
date. So the sender of the e-mail message is the person with
the problem,
not the receiver. See http://www.expita.com/header1.html for
more details.
--
Gerry Boyd
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