(I apologize if this has already been answered, or because this is a more general, non-NMH-specific problem. I'm guessing that others on this list have encountered and solved this before.)
Emails that I send are starting to be tagged as spam or potential spam more frequently these days. (This has been happening for a good while, but recently started to reach the "pain" threshold.) As you can probably see from this message's header, my nominal email provider is Google (@gmail.com) but my ISP is Comcast. In particular, they are not the same domain. Nor are my Google account's username and my machine's login ID the same (for historical reasons). So, even though I set up as much of my composed message's header to reflect the @gmail.com account, it's pretty clear that it's coming from someone else. Hence, the tagging of them by aggressive filters as spam. Note: since my machine login ID is a pretty common one, to avoid my emails bounces going to someone else accidentally I set up sendmail to specify my domain as @localhost.localdomain. This no doubt also contributes to the spam-tagging. I'm guessing that one "simple" solution might be to purchase my own domain, and then register it with GMail as an "equivalent address" to "validate" my emails as non-spam. I'd like to avoid this if possible. Has anyone else dealt with this situation successfully? Is there a solution that needs only NMH-level tweaking, or maybe an adjustment to my sendmail's configuration? Thanks! Bob _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list Nmh-workers@nongnu.org https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers