Hi Mark,
Am 21.07.2018 um 20:23 schrieb Mark Sapiro:
> This can be done, but without modifying code, not exactly as you
> propose. You can make it
[...]
Fully understood, and as always: thanks for your fast & accurate help
Andre
--
Andre Tann
-
In article
you write:
>On 07/19/2018 05:27 PM, Mark Sapiro wrote:
>> The problem is downstream has to trust me. If I'm gmail.com, I'll probably
>> be trusted. If I'm msapiro.net, probably not. Python.org, who knows.
>
>Yep.
>
>I've not yet seen any indication that there will be any good way to
In article you write:
>On 07/19/18 17:11, John Levine wrote:
>> In article
>> you write:
>>> Yes. Just about everything can be spoofed to some degree. It really
>>> depends on what information the owner of the purported sending domain
>>> publishes and what filtering / consumption of said in
On 7/20/18 10:23 AM, Andre Tann wrote:
>
> The sender's name in the from line of a confirmation mail should be
> changed/inserted. Example:
>
> This line:
>
> From:
> newsletter-confirm+7f07b5deb0843fad9ab40ead51ac7e7541cf2...@example.com
>
> should be changed to
>
> From: My-Compan
Hi folks,
I've been googling now for a while, but could not find a hint if the
following can be done:
The sender's name in the from line of a confirmation mail should be
changed/inserted. Example:
This line:
From:
newsletter-confirm+7f07b5deb0843fad9ab40ead51ac7e7541cf2...@example.com
s