On Sat, 11 Oct 2008, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
On Fri, October 10, 2008 17:05, Liam-PrintingAutomation wrote:
any email with a FROM as coming from our domain but is not a user (left
of @ sign) that isn't one of these X addresses?
On 10.10.08 21:01, Benny Pedersen wrote:
what rule gives -100 ?
whitelist, of course: "any email with a FROM as coming from our domain"
That's common mistake of adding local domain to whitelist_from, often used
by spammers to get mail through.
there is a number of ways to make sure its not giveing -100 to own domains
that is sent outside of localhost or even from localhost olso
adjust the score -100 to something like -0.01 and make use of dkim/spf to
compensate for real users thar send correct not just have your domain in
sender from
simply using whitelist_auth or whitelist_from_rcvd instead of whitelist_from
should be enough
I use whitelist_from_rcvd but am not sure I use it right:
whitelist_from_rcvd [EMAIL PROTECTED] ourldsfamily.com
Is that right?
Also, I've never heard of whitelist_auth and am curious to see an example.
Would using both _auth and _from_rcvd be good/better/worse?
Karl
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Matus UHLAR - fantomas, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; http://www.fantomas.sk/
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