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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Mail Server best practices - was: Pandora's Box of new TLDs
>On Sat, Jun 28, 2008 at 05:25:16PM -0500,
> Chris Owen <owenc@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote
> a message of 53 lines which said:
>It is because, if someone reports (by telephone, IRC or IRL) that he
>sent an email and I did not receive it, I regard as VERY IMPORTANT to
>be able to check the spam folder (with a search tool, not by hand) and
>go back to him saying "No, we really did not receive it".
In article
<!&!AAAAAAAAAAAuAAAAAAAAAKTyXRN5/+lGvU59a+P7CFMBAN6gY+ZG84BMpVQcAbDh1IQAA
AATbSgAABAAAACflLoEBLafQbWWwpT+evpQAQAAAAA=@xxxxxxxxx>, Frank Bulk -
iNAME <frnkblk@xxxxxxxxx> writes
>You mean, you don't employ *any* spam mitigation techniques besides sorting?
>Because if you do anything, even as basic as RBLs, you're not being
>consistent with your stance.
I agree completely with Chris Owen's approach, even though I use spam
mitigation techniques.
The reason for this is because those "lost" emails that I very
occasionally rescue from the spam bucket are:
NOT sent by someone on an RBL
NOT sent to an unpublished and unused address
(eg sales@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
etc.
--
Roland Perry
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