Hi Jonathan, ON Monday, February 24, 2003, 11:22:58 PM, you wrote: JA> Bouncing mail doesn't have to have any of the original headers if it JA> doesn't want. Most of the time a delivery report is provided which gives JA> the destination address, date, and subject... sometimes it's the full JA> message again
So what is the use of these headers, if they do not get returned to the sender? >> Also I have seen that with a bounce you can have a 500 error (address >> unknown) but also 544 error, (You are black listed). Are there anymore >> that I could use? JA> That really depends... a lot of the messages you can customize. That's true but these are official errors as defined in RFC's. (They should be 550 and 554 :() When you bounce a msg you want it to look as good and permanent as possible. Most spammers use software that will automaticly take you of the list if they get a "correct" hard bounce. -- Best regards, Gerard -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Deuce - A score of two for any hole. Too many of these on your scorecard means you're probably only counting your tee shots. Using The Bat! v1.62h on Windows 2000 5.0 Build 2195 Service Pack 3 ________________________________________________ Current version is 1.62 | "Using TBUDL" information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

