> Exactly. Another thing to consider is what you’re forwarding. If the mail 
> you’re signing is spam (and reported a spam by the final recipient) that’s 
> going to be a hit to your domain reputation and will affect deliverability 
> for all your customers.

This has always struck me as a strange policy on the receiving end. If someone 
sets up forwarding from server A to server B, then surely they want any mail 
that passes A's filters to be delivered to their account at B, whether B thinks 
it is spam or not? Why block A for a forwarding action, when you can still see 
the original sender and block them instead? 

Maybe I'm missing something.

Thanks,
Kasper

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