On Tue, Oct 08, 2019 at 02:47:02AM +0200, Jaroslaw Rafa via mailop wrote: > BTW. I also sometimes (quite rarely) send messages from my server using two > other sender addresses corresponding to two small organizations I belong to. > They are in different domains. I also tried to send mail from those two > addresses via AWS (while one of these addresses wasn't used as sender for > over a year) - both were classified as spam. As the "Received" headers > referring to my server were removed, the only thing that they could > have common with my server is the "rafa.eu.org" domain in the Message-Id and > maybe a few other headers. So I suppose that just a presence of this domain > anywhere in the message causes it to be classified as spam. Why?
The other commonality is that AWS EC2 is at least as much of a pit of spam and abuse as OVH is, and I'm not surprised that you don't get treated better by GMail when you start sending them mail from a rando EC2 address. The only thing that surprises me is that any of AWS' IP space gets past EHLO on *anyone's* SMTP server, including their Spam Emission Service. - Matt _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop