Stephen Morris:
If the issue is that the echoing of the sent mail to the sent folder on
the server is causing gmail to think it doesn't need to retain the
"echo", if I configure Thunderbird to save the sent mail in a local
"sent" folder, would that rectify the issue for both replies and sent mail?
Tim:
That sounds like it'd work, to me.
Stephen Morris
It looks like changing the sent location to a local folder makes no
difference either.
So, probably an issue of your address being the poster, rather than it
already having a copy of the message (going by duplicate message IDs).
Many systems, now, do a check for mail that is authorised. In other
words, when you post from a certain domain name, that domain has
records showing the services allowed to post its mail.
When you post to someone using your gmail address, the recipient's
service checks that the server sending it is an authorised sender for
that address. And if it isn't, then it can flag it as spam, or refuse
to accept it (as two common courses of action).
As a security check process relative to issues with our mail checker at
work, I tried sending an email from my gmail address and checked the
headers in the gmail when it arrived in my work mailbox, and the headers
indicated that gmail had verified that my email address was an
authorized sender.
regards,
Steve
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