You don't need to do anything. The problem is being generated
by
*my*
address, not yours. I've received a message from the mailer
daemon
at
fedora.com saying there seems to be a problem with my address,
but
I've
no idea what it could be. I'm receiving mail normally and the
account
is not over-quota (I've double-checked). I even received your
post
about this very problem!
I missed that the email address didn't match. I haven't received
these
messages for a long time. Strange that only some people get
them.
Maybe their messages look more spammy. ;-)
AFAIK there's nothing in this that indicates spam. Spam detection
by
the receiver would typically swallow the message without sending a
bounce. Bounces indicate some other type of error (non-existent
address, inbox full, etc.), but none of those apply in my case.
The gmail reply in the bounce message literally says spam:
host gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com[172.253.63.27] said:
550-5.7.1 [38.145.32.11 12] Gmail has detected that this
message is
likely 550-5.7.1 unsolicited mail. To reduce the amount of spam
sent to
Gmail, this 550-5.7.1 message has been blocked.
I should have said that the error didn't indicate spam detection by the
recipient (meaning according to some rule the recipient has
configured). It looks like the Gmail spam detection gave a false
positive where normally it's very reliable in my experience.
poc
The message indicates to me that Google thinks the mail is not a mail
that is not a reply to a mail I have sent, how it determines that I
don't know unless it is because the mail source is a mailing list, and
it seems that Google's assumption is that if it is unsolicited it is
spam. The other thing it indicates is, as was indicated in Kevin's
response, the Google believes the source address has produced spam or
the server it is coming from has produced spam (at least what Google
considers spam). What I find strange, which potentially means the
message content is meaningless, is if Google is classifying the mail as
spam then why does it not move the mail to its spam folder? Whats seems
to be the issue with the message is Google indicates it has blocked the
mail which the mailing list is getting an indication of that and
producing the bounce mail, what I don't understand with the bounce mail
is, the sample message I provided above was just one of many that were
in the bounce mail, was there really mails from all of them or were they
just a recipient list on the mail? One other thing that spam detection
does I believe, is consider that a mail could be spam if it comes from
an IP address rather than a DNS address, but I don't know how that is done.
regards,
BEGIN:VCARD
VERSION:4.0
N:Morris;Stephen;;;
FN:Stephen Morris
EMAIL;PREF=1;TYPE=home:[email protected]
END:VCARD
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