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On 20/02/12 3:00, Noel Butler wrote:
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On Sun, 2012-02-19 at 17:00 +0100, ml wrote:<br>
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fakessh.eu descriptive text "spf2.0/pra ip4:46.105.34.177
ip4:91.121.7.86 ?all"
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<pre>fakessh.eu descriptive text "v=spf1 ip4:46.105.34.177 ip4:91.121.7.86
?all"
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<br>
Why did you bother with the record at all? <br>
"Question mark" indicates you don't care and the remote should
bascially ignore it. <br>
Waste of time, please do some homework before making such foolish
recommendations<br>
<br>
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Just my point. SPF is a "message" from the sender of mail to the
receiver of mail, describing which senders(hosts, networks) are
allowed to expedite mail for the sender. The message is delivered
via DNS.<br>
<br>
It is up to the sender to make the rules and nobody can do that for
you, of course it may be good to get inspiration from others. E.g.
if you know that ALL valid mail will be sent from ONE server, you
can describe that, if valid mail can be sent from ANY host, that can
be described as well. This information is meant to be used to
evaluate whether a mail from you is valid or more likely spam. Only
you know what the contents should be.<br>
<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
Best regards
Sten Carlsen
No improvements come from shouting:
"MALE BOVINE MANURE!!!"
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