on 9-25-2008 5:21 AM Bob Hoffman spake the following:
Josh wroteAgreed! Its amazing to see the childishness of not being able to get one's server in order, ignoring Yahoo's FAQ's and then this kind of BS.Looking at the headers of the mail you have just sent from a yahoo client you have not followed to the letter Yahoo's requirements 4-7.4- consistent headers- there is nothing wrong with the headers. ...check. 5- can spam act..went there, nothing in my headers or mail suggests it ..check 6- mail authentication- no domain keys here, yahoo does not require except for bulk mailings, as per their faqs, spf and dkim taken off as useless and mail breaking. 7- reverse dns- not a dynamic ip...check. So...we agree to disagree that each thinks the other does not know what is happening. Lets leave it at that. Although your email headers have issues.....might want to look into that localhost 127.0.0.1 thing. That is a red flag. All those different mailservers from the same domain. Golly. Received: from n27.bullet.mail.ukl.yahoo.com (n27.bullet.mail.ukl.yahoo.com [87.248.110.144]) Received: from [217.146.182.177] by n27.bullet.mail.ukl.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 25 Sep 2008 12:07:03 -0000 Received: from [87.248.110.117] by t3.bullet.ukl.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 25 Sep 2008 12:07:03 -0000 Received: from [127.0.0.1] by omp222.mail.ukl.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 25 Sep 2008 12:07:03 -0000 Received: from [79.65.135.77] by web28215.mail.ukl.yahoo.com via HTTP; Thu, 25 Sep 2008 12:07:03 GMT X-Mailer: YahooMailWebService/0.7.218.2 From: Josh Donovan <josh.dvan@xxxxxxxxxxx>
An entry from localhost is very common on a webmail server. It shouldn't break anything, it is just a relay.
-- MailScanner is like deodorant... You hope everybody uses it, and you notice quickly if they don't!!!!
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