I've looked better, the error comes when I enter an address of this form:
rcpt to:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
250 ok
Tell me if you can reproduce that.
Thank you.
Sam Clippinger ha scritto:
This sounds like a bug, but I'm not able to reproduce this with 4.0.8 or
4.0.5. I created a recipient blacklist
Really looks like a bug for me, if the adress just has to be the
last part of the adress, and
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
is read as [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Am 26.11.2008 um 14:50 schrieb John Devenport:
Greetings,
I'm using spamdyke 4.05 on FreeBSD 7.0 and I receive a lot of spam
with
recipients
If I got it right, you receive spam from external host claiming to be
from your own domain? Is that it?
Wouldn't this be a case for SPF checking?
Arthur
Citando John Devenport [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I've tried also the 4.04, same behaviour.
David Stiller ha scritto:
Really looks like a bug
Yes, but I wanted to test both the things to find out which is better
for my environment.
Is there anyone with the same problem?
Arthur Girardi ha scritto:
If I got it right, you receive spam from external host claiming to be
from your own domain? Is that it?
Wouldn't this be a case for
Well, i must say that i have a lot problems with the specific case:
I have some customers that use one conection from my ISP and that
conection have just one IP, ok... i use this line on my /etc/tcp.smtp:
This sounds like a bug, but I'm not able to reproduce this with 4.0.8 or
4.0.5. I created a recipient blacklist file that contained one line:
@example.com
Then I created a recipient whitelist file that contained one line:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Then I attempted to deliver a message to a
You could block all unauthenticated mail from that IP address. Your
users would have to reconfigure their MUAs to authenticate (if they
aren't already) but that should stop the spam.
You could also turn on graylisting. Most spambots aren't smart enough to
retry their deliveries.
-- Sam