Op zaterdag 9 jun 2012 13:23 CEST schreef Michael Scheidell:

> On 6/9/12 5:55 AM, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
>> The following tree messages I see a lot in false positives:
>> 1.2 HS_INDEX_PARAM URI: Link contains a common tracker pattern.
>> 1.5 HTML_IMAGE_ONLY_28     BODY: HTML: images with 2400-2800 bytes of words
>> 1.7 RDNS_DYNAMIC           Delivered to internal network by host with
>> dynamic-looking rDNS
>>
>> I am an user, not a spam expert. What does this mean and what could I
>> tell the sender to have there email not ending in my spam folder?
>>
> RDNS_DYNAMIC: you can't.  their reverse dns is 'hinkey'.  Their ISP
> won't change it
> HS_INDEX_PARAM: tell them not to use web bugs in their marketing
> emails

Could you be more specific. If I tell them this they will not know
what to do.


> HTML_IMAGE_ONLY_28: tell them not to use email marketing templates that
> contain lots of crap designed to try to fool spamassassin (the harder
> you try to fool spamassassin, the more likely you get caught as
> spam)

Ditto.


> just unsubscribe from their marketing newsletter, that is the best way
> to tell the spammer/sender to find a more RFC compliant, more reliable
> email marketing company or program.

If you just go they will not know why and (can) not change. If I tell
them what is wrong and they change 'all' parties will benefit.

-- 
Cecil Westerhof
Senior Software Engineer
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/cecilwesterhof

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