On 13/11/2013 12:52 μμ, Paul C wrote:
From what I see from the spam scoring, you have a -100 from the domain
being whitelisted, i.e. google.com <http://google.com> in your
example. This gave the total spam score a value of less than 0, and
based on the header it says a 6.31 score or higher would cause the
message to be blocked. So the spammer is spoofing google.com
<http://google.com> and your set up doesn't seem to be verifying that
the ip and helo name do not match google. I don't use those content
filters to know enough to tell you what to do, but that's why the
emails are getting in. I'd be interested in hearing the solution to
this as well.
That is Correct ...
But there seem to be a zillion mail servers out there that do not comply
with the RFC,
most of the times DNS and Reverse DNS and IP ADDRESSES and HELO
hostnames are totally wrong from other-wise legit mail servers.
If I impose all these restrictions 50-60 % of legit emails will not pass
and my clients will be furious!
Clients don't want to understand this
specially if the these mails are about SALES !!!!
SALES = Money
But I have to reply to complaints again and again and again ...
"Why did this spam passed through ???" ....
Oh GOD please HELP !!!!
Thanks for your answers !!!
Harry