Hello all
Our customers strictly want to get their mail - so we prefer flagging over blocking. Looking around in my server logs (and postmaster accounts) makes me feel that most ISPs today are much more in blocking. Don't they all have huge problems with people complaining? We already have...
Regards Peter
Our customers strictly want to get their mail - so we prefer flagging over blocking. Looking around in my server logs (and postmaster accounts) makes me feel that most ISPs today are much more in blocking. Don't they all have huge problems with people complaining? We already have...
We allow customers changing those settings themself. The can 'flag', (and) or 'block' spams which is very flexible. No complains so far.
Martin
* on the Wed, Dec 07, 2005 at 10:07:51AM +0100, Martin Blapp wrote:
We allow customers changing those settings themself. The can 'flag', (and) or 'block' spams which is very flexible. No complains so far.
We generally flag. And allow the customers to let it delete automatically. The most complaints do come if either of it does not work ;)
Cheers Seegras
Hi Peter,
Our customers strictly want to get their mail - so we prefer flagging over blocking. Looking around in my server logs (and postmaster accounts) makes me feel that most ISPs today are much more in blocking. Don't they all have huge problems with people complaining? We already have...
We do aggressive blocking and we tell our custommers that if they want their maildomain hosted on our servers, they get a good spam filtering system but that we do not tollerate suspicious emails sent from even more suspicious smtp-servers. Most of our custommers are thankful because they get very little spam. From time to time I have to whitelist a sender emailaddress, but it's very rare. Most problems arise from small businesses that have their own exchange/groupwise/whatever-smtp-engine and don't use the mailout of their provider but instead send it from their adsl-IP.
Jean-Pierre
Hi Peter
On 07 Dec 2005, Peter Guhl wrote:
Our customers strictly want to get their mail - so we prefer flagging over blocking. Looking around in my server logs (and postmaster accounts) makes me feel that most ISPs today are much more in blocking. Don't they all have huge problems with people complaining? We already have...
We recently implemented greylisting and now our customers hardly get spam anymore. Coupled with a decent whitelist of known mailservers and auto-whitelisting of outgoing email, it works wonders. Greylisting also takes a lot of load from the virus scanner and from spamassassin, which is used to tag the remaining spam mails.
Regards
Oliver
Hi all
We recently implemented greylisting and now our customers hardly get spam anymore. Coupled with a decent whitelist of known mailservers and auto-whitelisting of outgoing email, it works wonders. Greylisting also takes a lot of load from the virus scanner and from spamassassin, which is used to tag the remaining spam mails.
Taking load from Spamassassin is also the main reason why I implemented greylisting on our scouting mailserver.
The Graphs show how much load was taken: http://spamkiller.scout.ch/index.php?view=_spamno_checkvirusmail_inskip_chec...
I did whitelist almost all known mailservers (From IMP Whitelist and a few more) as it does not make sense anyway to greylist them.
-Benoit-