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Email delivery by service provider
I've been having a 'nag' at mine for sending emails to me when they are addressed to a 'generic' address, eg as below:
Return-Path: <[email protected]> Delivered-To: [email protected] There is my email address Received: (qmail 95315 invoked from network); 11 Dec 2005 16:54:49 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO qm02.yyyyyyyyyy.net) (212.67.121.107) by qm12 with SMTP; 11 Dec 2005 16:54:49 -0000 Received: (qmail 64506 invoked from network); 11 Dec 2005 16:54:40 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO aykuh.gov) (65.190.130.230) by qm02 with SMTP; 11 Dec 2005 16:54:44 -0000 From: [email protected] To: [email protected] Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 16:40:43 UTC Subject: You visit illegal websites Not NORMALLY a problem , but with all the virus mails plus all the spam around at the moment, it is very tedious. Aha, they say, you should 'filter' these emails. So, the questions are:- how does a 'generic' email like that get sent to a personal address? are THEY doing everything they can to stop the spread of this stuff? should I be really have to place x hundred filter rules to stop this? surely any 'generic' address which is NOT on the provider's list should be blocked? should I keep on nagging? |
how does a 'generic' email like that get sent to a personal address? are THEY doing everything they can to stop the spread of this stuff? should I be really have to place x hundred filter rules to stop this? surely any 'generic' address which is NOT on the provider's list should be blocked? should I keep on nagging? |
Thanks!:{ That's cheering! I'll have a look at that filter.
The "To" field, listed in the mail headers, is not what the MTA uses to determine to whom to deliver the mail. The recipient is specified by the sender during the SMTP conversation between the two servers. So the sender puts one thing in the "To" field, but tells your ISP's server to deliver the mail to you, which it does. Anyone can put anything in the "To" header. Who knows? An ISP getting paid next-to-nothing is unlikely to be interested in setting up custom mail-handling for a customer. I doubt they'll listen. |
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