On Mon, 2015-07-27 at 09:16 -0400, Alex wrote: > Hi, > > On Sun, Jul 26, 2015 at 7:50 AM, Andrew Beverley <a...@andybev.com> wrote: > > On Sat, 2015-07-25 at 21:04 -0400, Alex wrote: > > > I have a postfix-2.10.5 server on fedora, and have several users that > > > forward their mail through to gmail. This is apparently enough to > > > break SPF and make gmail think I'm the originator of the email, > > > instead of the actual sender. Consequently, gmail considers it spam > > > and moves it to a spam folder. > > > > > > Is there anything I can do, including somehow rewriting the email, to > > > get gmail (and others, for that matter) to accept these forwarded > > > emails without considering them spam? > > > > I've just had to deal with the same problem. Google has a variety of > > workarounds, > > as detailed here: > > > > https://support.google.com/a/answer/175365?hl=en > > > > I didn't find most of them particularly helpful. The last one, however, > > seems > > to have done the trick (adding the forwarded email account as a secondary > > account in Gmail). > > This requires that you have access to the account from which the email > is being forwarded, correct? In my case, it is a single remote sender > that is being forwarded on to gmail.
No, you need access to the account *to* which the email is forwarded. So assuming that the scenario is someone who has their own personal domain and is forwarding it to a gmail account that they own, then it should be possible. Of course, it would require each of your users to make this change, but they have the incentive to do so if it stops all their email ending up in their spam folder. Andy