Dnia 11.05.2020 o godz. 15:36:47 Curtis Villamizar pisze:
> 
> I've had no problem with google dropping my email as spam in years.
> AOL and MSN (and friends, live, outlook, hotmail) sometimes, but
> resolved. Helps to have rDNS on your IPv6 and SPF and DKIM signed and
> all other things in place.
[...]
> google. Not so with aol, msn, comcast, maybe others. OTOH - what
> I've read is if even one user refiles an email into spam for some
> providers your chance of getting classified as spam goes up for all
> recipients. So don't send mail that people might not want and then
> refile as spam. It also helps to avoid sending mail to non-existant
> or disabled recipients (changed email providers).

All this is pretty obvious and none of this was the reason in my case. In
fact, the only thing Google was able to tell me about my messages being
classified as spam was the fact that they are getting spam from my parent
domain. Not my domain (rafa.eu.org), but my parent domain (eu.org), which
is ridiculous because eu.org is on the Public Suffix List, ie. it is
exactly like .com - anybody can register their domain under eu.org. If
somedomain.com sends spam, you won't automatically classify all other .com
domains as spam. So why do it for eu.org?

Also, what you wrote about users filing messages into spam also works the
other way - if your message is mis-classified as spam, and the recipient(s)
DON'T pull it out of their Spam folder and it stays there (and they don't,
as they don't know that it's there in the first place), it also increases
chances for your other messages to be classified as spam. So, once you get
into someone's Spam folder - even by mistake - the probability of your next
messages getting there increases automatically.
-- 
Regards,
   Jaroslaw Rafa
   r...@rafa.eu.org
--
"In a million years, when kids go to school, they're gonna know: once there
was a Hushpuppy, and she lived with her daddy in the Bathtub."

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