Steve Langasek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > No: there is nothing "proper" about rejecting mail from a host that you >> > have >> > configured to forward mail for you. > >> Nearly all of this mail flow is invalid in one way or another. > > Of course it is. That doesn't make it "proper" to reject such mail when > you've told some other host to forward it to you in the first place; I'm > sure it's a pretty common misconfiguration in the context of Debian mail > forwarding, but that doesn't make it right...
How can I avoid such a problem if I do not have the power to influence the mail server configuration of the machine that hosts the account I forward my Debian mail to? I currently forward Debian mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and although the domain is mine, the MX is not. I have no way to control the spam or any other policy of this server. Fortunately (or rather unfortunately except in this case) this server is really lax in accepting spam (they only offer to mark it in the subject). But if it was strict, what should I do? Not forward Debian mail and instead get it from master with POP3? Regards, Frank -- Frank Küster Inst. f. Biochemie der Univ. Zürich Debian Developer