> > Confirming "mail server" will keep you busy - especially the initial > configuration (there will be a lot of "WTF, now what'd I do!?" moments, > if you're like me). > > But yeah, postfix + dovecot (or other sasl agent) is pretty 'secure' in > terms of not getting blindly turned into a mail relay. Throw > spamassassin, greylists, and sieve scripts (server-side routing rules) on > top of the basic configuration and you'll end up with a really nice MTA. > I like mine better than gmail. Do you have any tutorials or something on how to setup "spamassassin, greylists, and sieve scripts"? > > If you've got a need to reach it from "anywhere", and don't necessarily > always have a laptop, then adding a web MUA (such as horde) is another > project. > Horde's webmail looks pretty awesome, will definitely look into that. > In either event, I strongly recommend that you purchase a certificate for > mail.yourdomain.com, and use it. It's overall easier (or at least in my > experience, switching from the self-signed to the CA-signed cert made > things easier). > Where do you recommend I get one of these? I tried the startssl thing, but chrome still complains that its not legit. > Since it's remote, maybe a reverse ssh setup so you can get "home"? > > I know what those words mean, but I have no idea what they mean when they are put in that order, care to elaborate? xD
~Joris
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