I used them for work and had pretty good luck with them with one
glaring exception.
Their handling of spam false positives is easy with users able to
release the messages on their own, and plenty of whitelisting rules to
allow mail through.
When it comes to messages flagged as a virus there
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 1:07 PM, Gregory Boyce wrote:
>
> When it comes to messages flagged as a virus there is no white listing
> allowed and releasing a mail takes a signed release form and time.
>
> This would be fine except they started using their antivirus engine to stop
&
On Oct 23, 2009, at 10:48 AM, Jonathan Billings
wrote:
> If the mail system couldn't figure out who you were
> asking for, it would generate an SMTP failure with a list of possible
> matches in the error, so you'd get a bounce with useful information in
> it.
Sounds like the stuff a spammers