Hi Paul, I've migrated a couple of mail servers over to hosts on mythic beasts in the last few months. Both have been working fine with gmail address delivery.
I have been using the Sympl software scripts and Mailman on v4 an v6. I've used existing domains that have been registered and used for email over several years and used these as hostnames as well, rather than the default mythic beasts vs hostnames. One other thing is to make sure you setup the reverse DNS - that is available as an option using the mythic beasts hosting panel. best Christian Paul Waring via mailop writes: > In the last week or so, I migrated my xk7.net email from one self-hosted > server to another. Both servers were setup in a similar way and adhered > to all the email best practice guidelines I could find (DKIM, SPF and > DMARC all pass, the server isn't on any public blocklists, and there are > no mailing lists on the server which might result in emails getting > marked as spam). > > Since the migration, any email sent to any domain hosted by Google > (gmail.com, G Suite customers etc.) has gone straight into the > recipient's spam folder. This happens regardless of whether I initiate > the conversation or am replying to an existing email, whether I'm in the > recipient's address book or not, and how many emails we've exchanged in > the past. > > Email to all the other major providers (Yahoo, Microsoft etc.) is > delivered to the recipient's inbox, and I've also tested against > sysadmin friends who have super-strict RFC conformity servers without > any problems. > > Before I change any more settings, I was wondering if there was a time > period during which Google treats a new server that it hasn't seen > before as a spam source? If this is something that will go away after a > few more days then there's not much point in me tweaking further. > > Thanks > > Paul -- Christian de Larrinaga https://firsthand.net _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop