On Sat 27 Feb 2010 06:13:58 PM CET, Marc Perkel wrote

You're making the assumption that the person who has the recipient domain has any control over the SPF rules. What often happens is that one domain is on a server with 1000 other domains and the hosting compant controls the rules.

such life i dont have

So if you say forward your old comcast account to your new domain then the new domain rejects all your good comcast email because of SPF.

then recipient domain MUST whitelist the forward IP to make sure SPF still works, no matter what domain is being forwarded from that IP will not being spf fail then, or if thats impossible add the forward ip to the sender domain spf record

Or if you use my spam filtering service or Postini or some other filter and forward service then restrictive SPF breaks that to.

i dont need it :)

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