Hi Otto, Are you saying that you have difficulty relaying abuse reports to Google hosted domains because their spam filtering generates false positives for those emails?
If that is what you are saying, then could you not tar or zip those reports up like others do? Google isn't alone in flagging inline content like that. Also, individual Apps users can create mailbox rules to "never" flag email from a particular source as spam. This is different from the global whitelist. Does that answer your question or have I misunderstood what you want to achieve? Ken. -- Ken O'Driscoll / We Monitor Email t: +353 1 254 9400 | w: www.wemonitoremail.com On Wed, 2017-05-03 at 13:57 +0300, Otto J. Makela wrote: > We (Funet, the Finnish NREN) receive and obtain abuse reports > from various sources and typically forward them to our clients, > which include educational, research and some governmental sites. > > Some of our clients have outsourced their email to Google. The problem > here is that also the abuse reporting addresses of these domains are > subject > to the whimsies of Google spam filtering. As far as I know, there is no > "do not spam filter this address" type solutions for Google mail. > > An ad-hoc solution is to whitelist our outgoing email servers, > but of course this doesn't help with reports sent directly to them > and messages sent are noted only to "generally not be marked spam". > > https://support.google.com/a/answer/60751?hl=en > > Suggestions? > _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop