On Sat, 29 Jul 2017 22:09:41 -0400
Alex wrote:
> But whitelist_auth operates on the envelope sender, not the "From:"
> address.
whitelist_auth is equivalent to creating separate whitelist_from_spf
and whitelist_from_dkim entries. SPF whitelisting uses the envelope
sender, DKIM whitelisting uses
On 07/29/2017 09:09 PM, Alex wrote:
Hi,
On Sat, Jul 29, 2017 at 7:27 PM, David Jones wrote:
On 07/29/2017 04:33 PM, Alex wrote:
I have a number of domains that I'm trying to whitelist. They hit
DKIM_VALID and SPF_PASS but all don't hit DKIM_VALID_AU. First, why
would they hit DKIM_VALID and
Hi,
On Sat, Jul 29, 2017 at 7:27 PM, David Jones wrote:
> On 07/29/2017 04:33 PM, Alex wrote:
>>
>> I have a number of domains that I'm trying to whitelist. They hit
>> DKIM_VALID and SPF_PASS but all don't hit DKIM_VALID_AU. First, why
>> would they hit DKIM_VALID and not DKIM_VALID_AU?
>>
>
> D
On 07/29/2017 04:33 PM, Alex wrote:
I have a number of domains that I'm trying to whitelist. They hit
DKIM_VALID and SPF_PASS but all don't hit DKIM_VALID_AU. First, why
would they hit DKIM_VALID and not DKIM_VALID_AU?
DKIM_VALID simply means the DKIM signature is a correctly signed message.
I have a number of domains that I'm trying to whitelist. They hit
DKIM_VALID and SPF_PASS but all don't hit DKIM_VALID_AU. First, why
would they hit DKIM_VALID and not DKIM_VALID_AU?
>From
>bounce-mc.us1_1211649.1262601-kelly.boschen=example@mail93.suw13.rsgsv.net
Sat Jul 29 14:23:05 2017
Fr