On Sat, 2008-03-29 at 09:00 +1000, Da Rock wrote: > I understand your concern with the loss of important emails, but > consider this: Do you send and recieve faxes? If a fax cannot connect > with the recipient, it queues the call and tries again in a random > time. If the sending fax is set up to do so... It's by no means a certainty, and analogies aren't a great way to argue a case about something else that's specific. > This is what happens with email. The server tries and if it can't > connect because of a specific error sent back, it'll queue the email > and try again later. No, "should" happen, not "does" happen. > Meanwhile, spam only gets attempted once and is rejected. Perhaps, but that's by no means a given. Spammers can resend, if they want to. They can, and usually do, exploit someone elses server, which may resend. > So all your important emails WILL get through, because the service is > legitimate. *May* get through. > Having seen this in my work in an ISP, as well as knowing > telecommunications technologies, lets me know that this does work. Having seen the system fail to work in the manner some people believe it works, I know that it's a false belief. > And once your clients have sent you an email they get whitelisted, > plus you can add them manually as well. a. I've certainly seen cases where it's very obvious that you don't get whitelisted. i.e. Weeks and weeks of messages that don't get through. b. Most people will not be able to add things, because they make use of someone else's server, that they can't configure. i.e. The senders and recipients ISPs'. -- (This computer runs FC7, my others run FC4, FC5 & FC6, in case that's important to the thread.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list