I normally use MXToolBox. But both show 100% clean for mail3.lcrcomputer.net
I do occassionaly have an account compromised and the bad guys abuse it for a short while. I have scripts in place to monitor the outbound queue size plus the AOL feedback loop catch most early.
Lyle Giese
LCR Computer Services, Inc.
FWIW I host email on SurgeMail for a number of domains that have neither SPF nor DKIM configured, with no known issues with GMail deliverability. No doubt you’ve checked your current IP reputation via something like <http://www.anti-abuse.org/multi-rbl-check/> Best, Chris 12.02.2017 um 04:13 schrieb Lyle <lyle@lcrcomputer.info>: That's always an issue. A while back I had a user's password compromise and these guys managed to send out in excess of 100,000 emails in just 2 hours. But thanks on the setting. Lyle On 02/11/17 18:10, surgemail-support wrote: Yes get dkim and spf configured, and yes you can enable encryption, set g_ssl_try_out "*" I don't know if ssl would help with this issue though, dkim and spf are the primary means of clarifying that your messages are really from you. In addition to that check you don't have a spammer sending out spam and damaging your reputation http://netwinsite.com/surgemail/help/hackers.htm ChrisP On 12/02/2017 3:08 a.m., surgemail-list@netwinsite.com wrote: I am hearing rumors that a lot of email coming out of my servers is ending up as SPAM at Gmail. (not a problem elsewhere and no I am not an mass email provider). One third party report indicated that our email was not encrypted? I am not sure of this report as it's third party. But is there a setting for outbound email to attempt ssl/tls connection that I might be missing? Or are they misinterrupting the signals from Gmail, did they really mean authenicated email. Which would mean missing SPF or DKIM signatures or ??? I don't have enough direct evidence to support either theory right now. Just wondering if someone else has run across this. Thanks, Lyle Giese LCR Computer Services, Inc.
That's always an issue. A while back I had a user's password compromise and these guys managed to send out in excess of 100,000 emails in just 2 hours. But thanks on the setting. Lyle On 02/11/17 18:10, surgemail-support wrote: Yes get dkim and spf configured, and yes you can enable encryption, set g_ssl_try_out "*" I don't know if ssl would help with this issue though, dkim and spf are the primary means of clarifying that your messages are really from you. In addition to that check you don't have a spammer sending out spam and damaging your reputation http://netwinsite.com/surgemail/help/hackers.htm ChrisP On 12/02/2017 3:08 a.m., surgemail-list@netwinsite.com wrote: I am hearing rumors that a lot of email coming out of my servers is ending up as SPAM at Gmail. (not a problem elsewhere and no I am not an mass email provider). One third party report indicated that our email was not encrypted? I am not sure of this report as it's third party. But is there a setting for outbound email to attempt ssl/tls connection that I might be missing? Or are they misinterrupting the signals from Gmail, did they really mean authenicated email. Which would mean missing SPF or DKIM signatures or ??? I don't have enough direct evidence to support either theory right now. Just wondering if someone else has run across this. Thanks, Lyle Giese LCR Computer Services, Inc.
Yes get dkim and spf configured, and yes you can enable encryption, set
g_ssl_try_out "*"
I don't know if ssl would help with this issue though, dkim and spf are the primary means of clarifying that your messages are really from you.
In addition to that check you don't have a spammer sending out spam and damaging your reputation
http://netwinsite.com/surgemail/help/hackers.htm
ChrisP
On 12/02/2017 3:08 a.m., surgemail-list@netwinsite.com wrote:
I am hearing rumors that a lot of email coming out of my servers is ending up as SPAM at Gmail. (not a problem elsewhere and no I am not an mass email provider).
One third party report indicated that our email was not encrypted? I am not sure of this report as it's third party. But is there a setting for outbound email to attempt ssl/tls connection that I might be missing?
Or are they misinterrupting the signals from Gmail, did they really mean authenicated email. Which would mean missing SPF or DKIM signatures or ???
I don't have enough direct evidence to support either theory right now. Just wondering if someone else has run across this.
Thanks,
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