On Nov 23, 2016 11:05 PM, "John H. Reinhardt" <johnhreinhardt at
yahoo.com>
wrote:
On 11/23/2016 8:00 PM, Eric Christopherson wrote:
>
> On Wed, Nov 23, 2016, Michael Brutman wrote:
>>
>> Gmail routinely marks these emails as spam. And Gmail clearly says: "
It
>> has a from address in
aol.com but has failed
aol.com's required tests
for
authentication."
Digging deeper into the header one finds:
"Received-SPF: pass (
google.com: best guess record for domain of
cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org designates 199.188.211.196 as permitted
sender) client-ip=199.188.211.196;
Authentication-Results:
mx.google.com;
dkim=neutral (body hash did not verify) header.i=(a)mx.aol.com;
spf=pass (
google.com: best guess record for domain of
cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org designates 199.188.211.196 as permitted
sender) smtp.mailfrom=cctalk-bounces at
classiccmp.org;
dmarc=fail (p=REJECT dis=NONE) header.from=aol.com"
I'm no expert on dmarc, but that looks to be the source of the pain.
Do we have any evidence that his messages are affecting the rest of us,
though?
I get disabled regularly. My address is at Yahoo. Currently I'm sitting
at 2.0
out of 5.0 for my bounce score.
What's a bounce score, and how do you know what yours is and what the limit
is? Does classiccmp specify 5.0, or Yahoo, or what?
The previous disabled messages came at:
11/20/2016
11/06/2016
10/25/2016
10/18/2016
10/13/2016
10/05/2016
09/26/2016
09/10/2016
08/23/2016
08/11/2016
08/06/2016
08/01/2016
07/19/2016
07/10/2016
07/01/2016
A fairly uneven distribution. None repeating sooner than 5 days and
sometimes
taking up to 18 days before hitting the 5.0 bounce limit.
I was thinking of changing my email to another provider even though I've
had
this one for at least 12 years. But if it's because of a configuration
problem, then other providers may react the same way so will it do any good?
John H. Reinhardt