> A server may reject a none local From address, but practically most
> servers don't
Several UK ISPs do validate the From address as being one of their
domains, BT ADSL in particular, to stop false Froms being used.
But this is very inconvenient for people using ADSL for connectivity
only with
On Jul 17, 2005, at 13:05, Arno Garrels wrote:
> A server may reject a none local From address, but practically most
> servers
> don't, since anybody can send any address in the Mail From command.
> However that address is used by the server to build the Return-Path,
> that's
> why we get so muc
Wilfried Mestdagh wrote:
> Hello Arno,
>
> So if I understeand it right, when the server is not possible to deliver
> the mail, then it uses that address to return an 'undeliverable' mail ?
Yes, correct.
Arno Garrels
> ---
> Rgds, Wilfried
> http://www.mestdagh.biz
>
> Sunday, July 17, 2005,
Hello Arno,
So if I understeand it right, when the server is not possible to deliver
the mail, then it uses that address to return an 'undeliverable' mail ?
---
Rgds, Wilfried
http://www.mestdagh.biz
Sunday, July 17, 2005, 19:05, Arno Garrels wrote:
> Hello Wilfried,
>> the MAIL FROM: ... or i
Hello Wilfried,
> the MAIL FROM: ... or in Smtp client FromName, what is original meaning
> of it? I have tryed with several SMTP servers and I can fill in
> whatever I want, it is always accepted, and for the mail reader only the
> headers are used.
>
> Or could it be that some SMTP servers hav
Hello,
the MAIL FROM: ... or in Smtp client FromName, what is original meaning
of it? I have tryed with several SMTP servers and I can fill in
whatever I want, it is always accepted, and for the mail reader only the
headers are used.
Or could it be that some SMTP servers have a list with valid F