RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ?

2003-06-16 Thread Karen D. Oland
Note, that for internal email, the IP address used in SPAMDOMAINS is the email address of the sender. So, for us, that gets translated to our ISP's name, as only the mail server has rDNS set up (we trap on our own mail server address in spamdomains, as that was being faked by quite a bit of email

RE: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ?

2003-06-16 Thread R. Scott Perry
Note, that for internal email, the IP address used in SPAMDOMAINS is the email address of the sender. So, for us, that gets translated to our ISP's name, as only the mail server has rDNS set up (we trap on our own mail server address in spamdomains, as that was being faked by quite a bit of

Re: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ?

2003-06-15 Thread Bill Landry
The RDNS test is run against the IP address of the original sending mail server, not the IP of the client machine that drafted the message. I don't believe that intermediate hops are considered in this test, just the RDNS of the originating mail server. Scott, can confirm this. The theory is

Re: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ?

2003-06-15 Thread R. Scott Perry
The RDNS test is run against the IP address of the original sending mail server, not the IP of the client machine that drafted the message. I don't believe that intermediate hops are considered in this test, just the RDNS of the originating mail server. Scott, can confirm this. Declude JunkMail

Re: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ?

2003-06-15 Thread Bill Landry
Okay, thanks for the clarification Scott. Bill - Original Message - From: R. Scott Perry [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2003 10:32 AM Subject: Re: [Declude.JunkMail] Spamdomains: Which IP ? The RDNS test is run against the IP address of the original