On 10/24/2016 7:46 AM, Jason Long wrote:
Thus google store my IP address? How can I see "X-Originating-Header"?
Google will store *any* data it can get its grubby paws on.
Often, if you add the email address to your contacts list (in the
providers web mail settings), it won't mark messages
Hi list,
This is my first post
What do you think about that?, can be good or is a waste of time?
""
- The problem:
Many sites at TOR network have multiple mirrors for support their user load.
When connecting to one of these mirror sites we can have the following
question:
Is this the right
Are You running a relay? In that Case doesnt You manually configure that in the
torrc file, also i think alot of sites You curl have only ipv4 support, that
was my Case when i had 2ipv4 and One ipv6
blo...@openmailbox.org skrev: (23 oktober 2016 18:58:38 CEST)
>How does Tor deal with IPv6? I
Send an email to another account you control (might work sending to
yourself, I've not tested).
Then in the receiving mail client choose "View original", "view headers"
or similar. It'll probably be one of the lowermost headers
On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 1:46 PM, Jason Long
Thus google store my IP address? How can I see "X-Originating-Header"?
On Monday, October 24, 2016 3:57 PM, Ben Tasker wrote:
Gmail tends to add a header containing your client IP - X-Originating-Header
I've never looked to see whether any spam filters are set up to use
Gmail tends to add a header containing your client IP - X-Originating-Header
I've never looked to see whether any spam filters are set up to use it
though. If they were to, they'd see the IP of an exit node so might mark as
spam based on that.
On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 12:56 PM, Jason Long
Hello.
When I open my Gmail via Tor browser and send email them my Emails forwarded to
Spam Folder why? I guess web mails never use clients IPs. Am I wrong?
Thank you.
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