Zitat von Grant <emailgr...@gmail.com>:
For the first time ever, 7 of my (very much legitimate) automated messages sent to gmail users have bounced with this message: Our system has detected that this message is likely unsolicited mail. To reduce the amount of spam sent to Gmail this message has been blocked. Please visit http://support.google.com/mail/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=188131 for more information. I will delve into that link, but is there an especially good method for avoiding this situation? - GrantHi,the spam filtering mechanisms of Google have been subject of long discussions on this list. The results were two-fold: While some blocks were found to be legitimate, others appeared truely random. However, one common finding is that Google's support is completely unresponsive.The only conclusion I could draw from all that was that the only sure decision is to not use Google, and educate all their users that they have to expect missing mail because their provider is not fit for taking part in federated e-mail.I know this is not helpful, but it is the only reliable answer there is. More details can be found in the archive.Not the sort of answer I was hoping for but thank you nontheless. :) Can I set up a feedback loop or anything of that nature with Google, or is there truly nothing that can be done? - Grant
You can *try* to use the hints you are given, but you are more or less at their mercy and some freemail provider are known for don't-care attitude. We have some similar examples with AOL and Outlook.com. While AOL finally resolved the issue, we never got any feedback from Outlook.com and the problem still persists. I finally give up on it because after all the *recipients* got what they pay for. You might have better luck with Google.
Regards Andreas
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature