On 2019-05-14 09:17, John Hardin wrote:
On Tue, 14 May 2019, cyflhn wrote:
It has happened many times that the emails from our server were
identified as
spam. I have checked the emails which were not identified as spam. But I
found that the SpamAssassin Scoring For MDAEMON_DNSBL is quite high, the
score of MDAEMON_DNSBL is always 4. I also checked the logs of
SpamAssassin
and here are some messages:
Is this a local SA install, or some third party testing service? If the
latter, who?
Performing DNS-BL lookup
* zen.spamhaus.org - passed
* bl.spamcop.net - passed
* bad.psky.me - failed - 198.54.117.200
That doesn't appear to be SA related. Is that just informational related
data?
* 1.6 BAYES_50 BODY: Bayes spam probability is 40 to 60%
* [score: 0.5000]
* 4.0 MDAEMON_DNSBL MDaemon: marked by MDaemon\'s DNSBL
* 2.1 FREEMAIL_FORGED_REPLYTO Freemail in Reply-To, but not From
I still don't know what's reason for such a high score for MDAEMON_DNSBL
That rule is not in the base SA ruleset so we can't help you analyze it.
I suggest you contact MDaemon to see why you're listed.
I've been aware on a family matter, but I can provide a bit of context
about this particular rule. I previously worked with MDaemon (then Alt-N
Technologies) and although this was some years ago I'm still familiar
with the product and can help off-list if needed, feel free to reach out
on or off list as applicable.
The "Performing DNS-BL lookup" header (above) shows the DNS-BLs which
are configured in MDaemon and the results for each. bad.psky.me has not
(to my knowledge) ever been a default in MDaemon.
Normally you should only use DNS-BLs for outright blocking at this stage
(and let SpamAssassin's own DNS-BL functionality score) as this feature
provides pre-DATA message rejection, but if you choose to accept
messages that hit MDaemon's DNS-BL then you can pass points into
SpamAssassin via the MDAEMON_DNSBL rule.
There are a few reasons for this, but mainly it comes down to the fact
that MDaemon's DNS-BL implementation predated SpamAssassin being
supported by MDaemon, and in the initial implementation there were a
number of issues with SpamAssassin's implementation when running under
Windows. These issues are long since resolved, but there is no incentive
to remove the integration.
Removing the IP from bad.psky.me will cause the rule in SpamAssassin to
disappear. Since bad.psky.me seems to be in a "list the world" phase the
MDaemon administrator should completely remove this DNS-BL from the
MDaemon configuration.
There is nothing a sender can do, only the receiving MDaemon server's
administrator can make changes here.