Am 07.02.2015 um 00:06 schrieb Dave Warren:
On 2015-02-05 05:02, Axb wrote:
Wonder what moron came up with the idea that Yahoo! should use
addresses in the multicast range 224.0.0.0/4 in the webmail Received
headers
There are other places/reasons that this happens. For example, take a
look at
On 2015-02-05 05:02, Axb wrote:
Wonder what moron came up with the idea that Yahoo! should use
addresses in the multicast range 224.0.0.0/4 in the webmail Received
headers.
There are other places/reasons that this happens. For example, take a
look at CloudFlare's "Pseudo IPv4" implementatio
On 2/5/2015 4:51 PM, Alex Regan wrote:
>
>
> On 02/05/2015 11:11 AM, Axb wrote:
>>
>> adding FTR:
>
> Can you explain FTR?
>
>> Received: from [238.10.216.99] by web122903.mail.ne1.yahoo.com
>> via HTTP;
>> Thu, 05 Feb 2015 xx:xx:xx PST
>>
>> Received: from [238.185.80.95] by web87801.mail.ir2.yaho
Hi,
FTR = for the record as far as I know.
Regards,
Rick
Sent from my iPad
> On Feb 5, 2015, at 5:51 PM, Alex Regan wrote:
>
>
>
>> On 02/05/2015 11:11 AM, Axb wrote:
>>
>> adding FTR:
>
> Can you explain FTR?
>
>> Received: from [238.10.216.99] by web122903.mail.ne1.yahoo.com via HTTP;
On 02/05/2015 11:11 AM, Axb wrote:
adding FTR:
Can you explain FTR?
Received: from [238.10.216.99] by web122903.mail.ne1.yahoo.com via HTTP;
Thu, 05 Feb 2015 xx:xx:xx PST
Received: from [238.185.80.95] by web87801.mail.ir2.yahoo.com via HTTP;
Thu, 05 Feb 2015 xx:xx:xx GMT
Is there a way
adding FTR:
Received: from [238.10.216.99] by web122903.mail.ne1.yahoo.com via HTTP;
Thu, 05 Feb 2015 xx:xx:xx PST
Received: from [238.185.80.95] by web87801.mail.ir2.yahoo.com via HTTP;
Thu, 05 Feb 2015 xx:xx:xx GMT
On 02/05/2015 02:02 PM, Axb wrote:
FYI:
Wonder what moron came up with
FYI:
Wonder what moron came up with the idea that Yahoo! should use addresses
in the multicast range 224.0.0.0/4 in the webmail Received headers.
eg:
Received: from [238.67.36.150] by web171402.mail.ir2.yahoo.com via HTTP;
Thu, 05 Feb 2015 10:09:15 GMT
Asume it to be a very unscientific wa