Joel Baker writes: > I'm sorry, but your individual desire to be able to send mail from > anywhere on the planet, claiming to be anyone on the planet...
What makes you think I want to claim to be "anyone on the planet"? I have a valid domain and I want replies and bounces to go to it. > If adding .1 to your SA score for lacking a repudiation protocol, and 3 > (or 5, or whatever) for claiming to be from a domain that denies that it > origionates mail to the rest of the world from your IP... I have no IP. Outgoing mail from home goes via my ISP's smarthost. Incoming mail goes to his POP server. > If lacking a domain-authorized relay point comes to eventually have the > same statistics, you'd better bet that you'll have the same sorts of > penalties in spamfilters. What do you mean by "a domain-authorized relay point"? It was my understanding that the idea behind SPF was that I would list in the DNS for my domain the IPs that were authorized to send mail claiming to be from my domain. That would be fine with me, but I evidently misunderstood. -- John Hasler [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler) Dancing Horse Hill Elmwood, WI