Autocorrpt...meant https://mailjet.com.




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On Sat, May 2, 2020 at 1:49 PM -0400, "gmavt.net" <[email protected]> wrote:










Https://mailed.com works the same, free up to 200 messages per day.




Most email smtp forwarders require verification of domain ownership and 
properly configured DNS SPF records and possibly DKIM and DMARC as well.




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On Sat, May 2, 2020 at 12:54 PM -0400, "Marcantonio Rendino" <[email protected]> 
wrote:










I'm not sure what that's asking, however SendGrid can accept email via either 
API or SMTP - so, for example, in the latter case, whatever bit of code wants 
to send an email, does so via a SendGrid hostname vs. a local one; that simple.

> On May 2, 2020, at 10:21 AM, Joe Golden  wrote:
> 
> Does this mean no smarthost?
> 
> On Fri, May 01, 2020 at 02:08:58PM -0400, Marcantonio Rendino wrote:
>> You correctly focus on one of the core issues: deliverability. Which is a 
>> moving target and requires time and effort to address - no one should be 
>> running their own mailserver anymore. (I've done it professionally - and I 
>> wouldn't recommend that either -- too much pain.)
>> 
>> https://sendgrid.com/free/  - let someone else worry about these 
>> commoditized details -- same as we don't solder our own motherboards anymore.
>> 
>>> On Apr 29, 2020, at 4:34 PM, Ron Lawrence  wrote:
>>> 
>>> Hi folks,
>>> 
>>> Tell me if posting question like this is out of bounds.  I’m still 
>>> relatively new to Linux—but I’m managing my own servers.  I’m running 
>>> Debian 9 and working in PHP.  The application I’m working on needs to be 
>>> able to send emails.  PHP requires an MTA to be installed for its mail() 
>>> function to work.  I’ve installed SendMail, but I’m getting lost in what 
>>> documentation I have found for configuration.
>>> 
>>> I’m wondering what people are using for an MTA and how you are solving the 
>>> problem of mail servers junking your emails (because they don’t trust the 
>>> source).  My thought here is to use one of my email providers (Comcast, 
>>> GoDaddy, or Gmail) for the SMTP service.  But that means configuring the 
>>> MTA to do that.
>>> 
>>> Any advice would be appreciated.
>>> 
>>> Thanks in advance,
>>> 
>>> Ron Lawrence
>>> Publishers' Assistant
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> http://pubassist.com 
>>> ph: 800-310-8716
>>> 
>> 
> 
> -- 
> Joe Golden /_\ www.Triangul.us /_\ Coding, Drupalism, Open Sourcery











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