Hi, Come on guys, the OP ask about instant messaging and mail is everything except instant messaging.
IRC with recording bot could do the job. (But it's clearly old and kind of hard to setup) By the way, you could make a simple app based on AMQP protocol to fit your need. Regards, Le 31 août 2016 9:48 AM, "Joe" <j...@jretrading.com> a écrit : On Wed, 31 Aug 2016 08:27:51 +0200 deloptes <delop...@gmail.com> wrote: > Lisi Reisz wrote: > > > > >> About reliability - I have not seen recently undelivered mails > >> (except bounces between gmain and yahoo . > > > > Lucky you! > > > > Lisi > > Luck is something, that is out of scope in terms of software. Use > authorized SMTP servers. Who authorises them, if not the owner of the domain? Should our governments expect to be paid for email server licences? > This means you can not install on your linux > box an smtp server, send an email and expect it to be delivered. I have done so, for about fifteen years. I like it that way. > If > it is your provider, change it or talk to them. It is not common that > messages are rated as spam, when they come out from legal MX records. The MX record is not involved in sending. Many companies outsource their anti-spamming, or for other reasons use completely different sending and receiving servers. What you need are complementary domain host A record and IP address PTR records, pointing to each other, along with an ISP which doesn't host bulk emailers and is otherwise willing to keep itself off blacklists. > As I said DMARC initiative is going on at the moment (and since > couple of years) and it will affect the mailing in positive way I > hope. The main problem with anything like that is that many people have relatively complex email arrangements, e.g. forwarding from a number of email addresses to another, and these tend to get broken by security measures. A couple of years ago my ISP, who had provided email services based on sub-domains, outsourced them to an Exchange-based system using the MS SPF system. I don't use the provided sub-domain, so it didn't involve me, but there was a lot of trouble about it, and eventually the ISP grudgingly provided another pair of MX records for a SMTP server which did not implement this system. Email is still a useful messaging protocol, it is somewhat broken, but the cure absolutely must not be worse than the disease, or we'll all end up using Facebook. -- Joe