Youri V. Kravatsky wrote: > Hello Eric, > > Saturday, September 5, 2009, 7:43:00 PM, you wrote: > >> The first test I sent to [email protected]. Interestingly enough, >> it was rejected because I have @mydomain.com in my blacklist_senders >> file. This is to prevent spamd where the sender address is spoofed with >> my domain. It works because all email for my domain is sent with >> authentication (a good practice), and authenticated users circumvent all >> spamdyke rules. > Well, let's imagine, that you will send mail to thyself (or even more > important, to the OTHER domain at your hosting), not through YOUR server, > but through authenticated SMTP e.g. gmail.com, or through SMTP of his local > internet provider (you know, cable providers blocks external SMTP servers > access very freguently, and it is very reasonably, 'course). Then this mail > will be definitely rejected, not being spam, but being inter-user > communication. >
Right, as it should be. All email from my domain *is* (at least should be) sent through my server, where it is delivered locally. I can't imagine why I would want to send email from my domain and to my domain via any external server. -- -Eric 'shubes' _______________________________________________ spamdyke-users mailing list [email protected] http://www.spamdyke.org/mailman/listinfo/spamdyke-users
