On 06/02/2011 17:30, Jerzy Łogiewa wrote:
How do scrubbed versions of these headers affect deliverability? Do services
flag as spam these messages?
The major part of my full time job is as an email administrator.
Scrubbing headers will affect deliverability to some systems. Probably
not as
On Monday 07 February 2011 04:41:06 t...@lists.grepular.com wrote:
The major part of my full time job is as an email administrator.
Scrubbing headers will affect deliverability to some systems. Probably
not as much as having a Tor exit node IP in your Received headers
though. Smarthosting
How do scrubbed versions of these headers affect deliverability? Do services
flag as spam these messages?
--
Jerzy Łogiewa -- jerz...@interia.eu
On Feb 2, 2011, at 6:47 PM, Jan Weiher wrote:
Probably the whole header. But except from the obvious I would
especially look for the received:
In email, what are anonymity risks? Header contains sender domain (maybe IP)
but what else?
Probably the whole header. But except from the obvious I would
especially look for the received: lines, the date (because it might
contain your timezone) and the X-Mailer header (shows your user
On Wed, Feb 2, 2011 at 5:47 PM, Jan Weiher j...@buksy.de wrote:
In email, what are anonymity risks? Header contains sender domain (maybe
IP) but what else?
Probably the whole header. But except from the obvious I would
especially look for the received: lines, the date (because it might
Bjarni Rúnar Einarsson writes:
Combine that sort of stuff with analysis of writing style, vocabulary, etc.
and you might be able to correlate two e-mails as originating from the same
person with some degree of accuracy.
I'm not aware of any research into the trackability of such things, as
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