Oh no. I've just discovered that Outlook replies to the "Sender:" field, over the "From:" field in many situations. It uses "From:" when you hit "Reply", but it uses "Sender:" to display the "From:" field in certain places (only some places! it's crazy!), and worst of all, it uses Sender: when you respond to Outlook calendar announcements.
This is bad in our environment, where nearly everyone uses Outlook, and people often send meeting announcement to the all-company list. Now that I've moved our lists to mailman, all of these calendar responses go to the list-admin (me!). Yuck. There's no way I'm going to be able to get these people to stop using Outlook, so I'm looking for other solutions to this problem. Do you think it'd be a *really* bad idea for me to modify mailman to not include the Sender: field at all? I realize it's contrary to RFC 822.. But is it actually *bad* in any practical sense that I'm not realizing? Does anyone here follow these things and know what Microsoft's position on this is? It seems pretty clear to me that their using the "Sender:" header like that is just *wrong*, but maybe I'm missing something. --jessica ps: apologies if you've seen this already. I haven't gotten any responses and am just trying again. I'm really curious to know people's opinions on this. I hate to do something against the RFC just because so many people are using software that doesn't respect the RFC. it just seems *wrong*. But I do need a practical solution. :/ For now I have a procmail filter just filing them away for me, but really, I need these things to go back to the person who should be getting them. ------------------------------------------------------ Mailman-Users maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/mailman-users