On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 15:58:33 -0700, Gerald Oskoboiny via mailop
wrote:
>Is it still necessary to warm up new IP addresses gradually
>instead of going directly to this volume of deliveries? My
>impression is that it's less and less necessary in the age of
>DMARC, SPF and DKIM.
The rule that go
On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 23:21:51 +, Matt Palmer via mailop
wrote:
>That's some mighty early adoption you've got there.
Yeah. I'm gonna have my cataract surgery in a couple weeks. Meanwhile, the
correct number is 1996.
Fytu, &c.
mdr
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On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 4:30 PM Gerald Oskoboiny via mailop <
mailop@mailop.org> wrote:
> We are planning to move the system that hosts our email
> discussion lists from its old home where it has been for decades
> to an EC2 instance on AWS. It does about 15k deliveries per day,
> most of which go
Your biggest threat is hosting on AWS..
Given the nature of EC2, you want to ensure that the IPs you are using
are not in the midst of some abusive IPs, and AWS is still not providing
public 'rwhois' delegation to our knowledge.
Make sure that you have a correct PTR record of course, the gene
On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 12:39:04PM -0500, Michael Rathbun via mailop wrote:
> an account that I established at Yahoo! in 1986
That's some mighty early adoption you've got there.
- Matt
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We are planning to move the system that hosts our email
discussion lists from its old home where it has been for decades
to an EC2 instance on AWS. It does about 15k deliveries per day,
most of which go to gmail or google-hosted email systems.
Is it still necessary to warm up new IP addresses
Thank you everyone. Is there any recommendation on other 3rd party senders that
can be trusted instead of SendGrid. My last resort will be to setup some MTA's
with the few free IP they have from the Datacenter.
I also understand that the client is in the middle of a catch-22 in terms of
sendin
On 3/22/24 14:58, Michael Peddemors via mailop wrote:
If they are 'dedicated', doesn't matter if they are coming from
SendGrid, the PTR should reflect your clients domain.
host 149.72.234.90
90.234.72.149.in-addr.arpa domain name pointer
wrqvzxrx.outbound-mail.sendgrid.net.
If Sendgrid claim
On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 15:47:11 +, Michael Irvine via mailop
wrote:
>I can't say the specific lenders, but I can say that it is not just bank and
>money lending. We have clients who are from the courts and other 3rd parties
>that do not fully validate the email that is given to them. We still
On 2024-03-25 at 12:53:31 UTC-0400 (Mon, 25 Mar 2024 17:53:31 +0100)
Jaroslaw Rafa via mailop
is rumored to have said:
Does USA have a government-certfied platform for electronic delivery
of
documents
Not for general use. The IRS is piloting a direct tax filing system for
a small number of
It appears that Jaroslaw Rafa via mailop said:
>Does USA have a government-certfied platform for electronic delivery of
>documents (like many European countries have) ...
No, and given the political structure here, we never will.
We do have a post office which delivers mail reliably to
every add
It appears that Michael Irvine via mailop said:
>I can't say the specific lenders, but I can say that it is not just bank and
>money lending. We have clients who are from the courts and other 3rd parties
>that do
>not fully validate the email that is given to them. We still must take it as
>the
On 25 Mar 2024, at 16:53, Jaroslaw Rafa via mailop wrote:
>
> Does USA have a government-certfied platform for electronic delivery of
> documents (like many European countries have) where every person can create
> a "trusted account" ("trusted" means the identity of the person is confirmed
> in s
On 2024-03-25 at 11:47:11 UTC-0400 (Mon, 25 Mar 2024 15:47:11 +)
Michael Irvine via mailop
is rumored to have said:
how can we guarantee it to the inbox if many of the users mark it as
SPAM and potentially blocks other communication.
You cannot. The fact that you have an email address is
Dnia 25.03.2024 o godz. 16:10:47 Rob Kendrick via mailop pisze:
> > The problem I am trying to fix is that these are legal emails and I
> > need a way to signal that to the providers. With many states and USA
> > government stating that email is a legal form of communication, how
> > can we guarant
> how can we guarantee it to the inbox
You can't.
Anecdotally: Any legal mail I've received just notifies me of a URL I need to
click. Upon clicking that URL, the sender is notified I've opened the document.
If I never open the document they can assume it has never arrived (or I have
never checke
On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 03:47:11PM +, Michael Irvine via mailop wrote:
> The problem I am trying to fix is that these are legal emails and I
> need a way to signal that to the providers. With many states and USA
> government stating that email is a legal form of communication, how
> can we gua
I can't say the specific lenders, but I can say that it is not just bank and
money lending. We have clients who are from the courts and other 3rd parties
that do not fully validate the email that is given to them. We still must take
it as there are no good ways to get the correct known email for
One also has to consider the quality of the data received. What kind of
lender would accept an email address such as hotm...@hotmail.com as
legit? (not the real address I'm seeing on mail from the noted IP
addresses, but similar).
Richard
On 2024-03-25 6:50 a.m., Kent McGovern via mailop wrot
"Biggest issue we have is that the number of false spam complaints due to
the nature of the industry."
They aren't false spam complaints in the eyes of the people receiving the
email.
Kent McGovern
On Sun, Mar 24, 2024 at 10:52 PM Michael Irvine via mailop <
mailop@mailop.org> wrote:
> Thank yo
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