Finally, we seem to get closer ;-)
On 12 Sep 2002 at 10:06, Davide Libenzi wrote: > it is not difficult to prove that a message come from your servers if you > really need, use the Received: trace. Anybody with slight computer skill can do so. But not 99% of the people, using mail. (excuse my low oppinion about the masses out there, but it is based on experience as an admin :-P) Those guys (and gals too) yust pick up the phone / compose a new message, bothering me having sent them Klez/Yaha/you name it ... > usually people wants to make sure > that mail come from a given person/company not from given MTAs. So if I could teach my folks to use GPG/PGP themselves, I would be glad and everything's fine. But I am lucky some of them can even answer mails at all. Since they are employees at the organization I work for, I just can't say 'your problem, I don't care'. > anyway you > can do this with XMail + filters. THIS IS THE INTERESTING PART: as far as I figured out, I just can use filters for messages delivered to domains, handled by _my_ XMail. Did I miss something here ? > ( you don't need to cc my address in these messages, i read the mailing > list ) Of course. Sorry, silly of me ;-) Regards, Goesta -- Wiener Hilfswerk - EDV 1072 Wien, Schottenfeldgasse 29 Tel: 512 36 61 DW 407 / Fax 512 36 61 33 - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe xmail" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] For general help: send the line "help" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]