On 7 Nov 2008, at 20:08, Martin Strand wrote:
We're an email service provider hosting ~3000 domains. Customers can delegate their domains to our nameservers and administer email accounts with a web interface.
I figured it would be a good idea to reserve the postmaster@ and  
abuse@ addresses for hosted domains and forward them to our own  
postmaster account.
Now one of these customers wants to create a  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] account and use it for his personal email...
I just want to ask what you guys think about this policy, am I just  
being silly when reserving these addresses in the customer's own  
domain? Should I drop that restriction and leave their domains alone?
In general, instead of reserving [EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED], I  
would instead set those mailboxes up with a BCC or similar to your own  
mailboxes.  Then if the customer wants to set them up for him/herself,  
they can.  If I were a customer of yours, I would want to be able to  
see what arrives at those mailboxes as well (for any number of reasons).
That said, a couple points:
1. I would advise your customer not to use [EMAIL PROTECTED] as a personal mailbox. 2. If you do make the arrangement I recommend above, the fact that all his personal mail is going to your mailbox might be enough to dissuade him.
For all but one of your customers, the BCC-ing (or however you choose  
to do it) is a pure gain for them, since now they can do a little more  
than they could do before.  For this one customer...well, other people/ 
admins are going to treat the [EMAIL PROTECTED] as the postmaster  
address, regardless of how he decides to use it; and as a result, you  
are somewhat obligated to too.
Anyways...those are just my thoughts on the matter.  It's obviously up  
to you.
-Neil.



Reply via email to