Oh thank you. I am so glad you explained this to me.

—srs
________________________________
From: mailop <mailop-boun...@mailop.org> on behalf of Scott Q. via mailop 
<mailop@mailop.org>
Sent: Monday, November 11, 2024 5:45:50 PM
To: Graeme Fowler <graeme+mai...@graemef.net>; Mailop <mailop@mailop.org>
Subject: Re: [mailop] Blacklisting of Microsoft Exchange Online Nov. 2024

But it's not really the same. Not all providers offer free accounts which 
clearly attracts abusers a lot more than paid accounts. Furthermore, not all 
providers do this:

"Segregation of outbound email traffic: Every outbound message that's sent 
through the service is scanned for spam. If the message is determined to be 
spam, it's delivered from a secondary, less reputable IP address pool named the 
high-risk delivery pool. For more information, see..."

"https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/defender-office-365/outbound-spam-protection-about";

Scott

On Monday, 11/11/2024 at 06:53 Graeme Fowler via mailop wrote:
Suresh said:
> Not an unusual state of affairs with a spam trap fed blocklist and overall 
> high levels of outbound spam from any given platform.

And then Scott said:
>
> Not really. Smaller providers manage their reputation a lot more carefully.

Which is essentially the exact same thing. For any given IP address or network, 
if it spews junk, it’ll get blocked eventually (Suresh’s point). If it doesn’t, 
it won’t (Scott’s point).

Think, type, review, drink tea (or coffee if you must), then review again and 
delete as appropriate.

Cheers!

Graeme
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