Hello,

> You must be either hosting couple of user accounts only or
> you had never spent a second reading your servers' logs.

I'm not sure if it matters as far as my idea is concerned.

> Exampke below, just randomly-picked machine I have, todays log
> (and I see thousands of this shit daily; replaced target,
> legitimate domain with @x, but it does not really matter):

I'm afraid it has nothing to do with the idea. To make it simple
again: John and George have email accounts on my server. Jane (who
has an email account on some server, not mine) sends an email to John.
Since it is a legitimate email it is passed after graylisting.

OK, and now the clue. There's next email from Jane. It is to George,
and this is _the_only_ difference from email number 1 to John (so it
would be passed if it was to John, however it is to George so it isn't
passed because it's graylisted first).

So, if email no. 1 has been passed and now Spamdyke remembers that
every email from Jane (sender, IP, etc.) to John should be accepted
for given time without graylisting it, why not make use of this and not
to apply this rule for mail from Jane to George?

-- 
best,

 mrxxxmryyy

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