Michael Loftis writes:
>OK then lets take a look at the tags you hit on.  Right away you notice 
>FROM_AND_TO_SAME -- so there's 1.3 points your recievers probably won't 
>get.  A large portion of your message is in UPPERCASE.  If you can reformat 
>the message so that less of it is in uppercase you can pass that check.

True, but the biggest cause was RAZOR_CHECK.

>The bottom line is you can not control what recievers consider spam.  You 
>can put a note in the bottom of the message warning them, or at the time 
>they subscribe warning them, but it's up to the users to decide to filter 
>or not filter a message.

No I can't prevent them from considering it spam.  But if a widely
used tool blocks my email, *I* have a problem.

Anyway it appears I misunderstood how Razor works; I thought it used
the message headers to block certain sites that generate spam, rather
than looking at the message body.

--Bill.

-- 
William R Ward            [EMAIL PROTECTED]          http://www.wards.net/~bill/
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by
 little statesmen and philosophers and divines."        - Emerson


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