That idea also crossed my mind, that it would only be displayed when the
actual time is > than the Date in the email.
Unfortunately, that's something I cannot tell, I don't know and since it is
occurring rarely, it's hard to ask the user to "try again".

Le mer. 20 avr. 2022 à 18:11, Laura Atkins via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> a
écrit :

>
>
> On 20 Apr 2022, at 16:44, Cyril - ImprovMX via mailop <mailop@mailop.org>
> wrote:
>
> Thank you all.
>
> About Laura's question, I can confirm that on our end, we successfully
> forwarded the message with a 2XX response from Google within a few seconds.
> Our timestamp show that this user should have received the email 8 hours
> before he really received it.
>
>
> How was he accessing the mail? Was he using an IMAP client or one of the
> Google controlled MUAs?
>
> Like, I’m wondering if this was just a display issue (say: Google won’t
> display mail until the actual timestamp) or if Google really held onto the
> mail somewhere in a spool until the timestamp was accurate. It seems weird
> to me that Google would sit on an email for exactly 8 hours and then
> deliver it to him. But it seems not-unreasonable to me that Google would
> have their client set to not display email until after it was delivered
> (and because of the timestamp issue it wasn’t ‘delivered’ for 8 hours.
>
> But an IMAP client that isn’t under the control of Google will display the
> message if it’s in the inbox, no matter if it was delivered yet or not.
>
> laura
>
> --
> The Delivery Experts
>
> Laura Atkins
> Word to the Wise
> la...@wordtothewise.com
>
> Email Delivery Blog: http://wordtothewise.com/blog
>
>
>
>
>
>
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