On 09/05/2012 12:50 PM, Daniel Taylor wrote:

On 09/05/2012 10:19 AM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 09/05/2012 05:56 AM, Daniel Taylor wrote:

On 09/04/2012 03:52 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 09/04/2012 09:34 AM, Daniel Taylor wrote:
If you are sending direct SMTP on behalf of your domain from essentially random 
locations, how are we supposed to pick you out from spammers that do the same?


Use DKIM.
You say that like it's a lower bar than setting up a fixed SMTP server and 
using that.

I say it like it addresses your concern.

Well, if you've got proper forward and reverse DNS, and your portable SMTP 
server identifies itself properly, and you are using networks that don't filter 
outbound port 25, AND you have DKIM configured correctly and aren't using it 
for a situation for which it is inappropriate, then you'll get the same results 
with a portable SMTP server that you would sending through a properly 
configured static server.

So, no, "use DKIM" does not address the delivery difficulties inherent to using 
a portable SMTP server.

My how the goalposts are moving. DKIM solves the problem of producing
a stable identifier for a mail stream which is what your originally positioned
goalposts was asking for. It also makes reverse dns lookups even more
useless than they already are.

Mike

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