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 Posted by Jerry Stuckle on 02/14/07 11:15 
Captain Paralytic wrote: 
> On 14 Feb, 00:19, Jerry Stuckle <jstuck...@attglobal.net> wrote: 
>> Captain Paralytic wrote: 
>>> On 13 Feb, 15:43, Erwin Moller 
>>> <since_humans_read_this_I_am_spammed_too_m...@spamyourself.com> wrote: 
>>>> Hi Group, 
>>>> Does my email have an increased chance to end up marked as spam/deleted if: 
>>>> - The From address is from another domain than the machine sending the 
>>>> email? 
>>>> eg: 
>>>> My website resides atwww.example1.com 
>>>> and PHP tries to send email with FROM: 
>>>> i...@example2.com 
>>>> If this increases the chances of being marked as spam (or completely 
>>>> refused, or never delivered, or something else BAD), then I have to move a 
>>>> domain to another provider, which I try to avoid. 
>>>> TIA! 
>>>> Regards, 
>>>> Erwin Moller 
>>>> PS: I am also happy with some url that explains the matter, but it has to be 
>>>> relatively simple, because I am no smtp/antispam/emailheaders/etc -guru. 
>>> If you think about it, most email comes from machines that have no 
>>> domain at all. 
>>> I send mail from Outlook Express on my machine. My machine has an IP 
>>> address but does not have a domain name (which is only a friendly way 
>>> to refer to an IP address). Yes I send it through an SMTP relay, but 
>>> that realy will never be associated with theIP address of my machine. 
>> Do you have an MTA running on your machine?  Or are you using an email 
>> program (i.e. Thunderbird, Outlook Express)? 
>> 
>> If the latter, your email is not "coming from your machine".  It is 
>> being composed on your machine, but as far as the internet is concerned, 
>> it is coming from whatever MTA you connect to to send your mail.  For 
>> instance, I compose mail on my machine - but it's being sent from my 
>> VPS, which does have a domain. 
>> 
>> And BTW, "most emails come from machines that have no domain at all...". 
>>   Very few machines have 'no domain'.  For instance, in my case the 
>> domain is that of my ISP (but that's not the domain the email is sent from). 
>> 
>> -- 
>> ================== 
>> Remove the "x" from my email address 
>> Jerry Stuckle 
>> JDS Computer Training Corp. 
>> jstuck...@attglobal.net 
>> ==================- Hide quoted text - 
>> 
>> - Show quoted text - 
>  
> Au contraire, most machines nowadays have non-routable IP addresses 
> which do not have domains associated with them. The gateway to the 
> internet may have a domain associated with its address, but the 
> machine itself will not. 
>  
 
Maybe where you are.  But not where I am. 
 
Yes, some corporations have them behind firewalls.  But not all of them,  
  by any means.  Here in the DC area I know of quite a few which aren't  
- mainly because they need to be accessed by Remote Desktop, GoToMyPC, etc. 
 
And virtually all broadband and dialup users are on dynamic IP's - but  
they still have domains associated with the machine itself.  For  
instance, my computer right now has the id  
c-xxx-xxx-xxx-xxx.hsd1.md.comcast.net (x's are my ip address).  Quite  
common amongst ISP's nowadays. 
 
--  
================== 
Remove the "x" from my email address 
Jerry Stuckle 
JDS Computer Training Corp. 
jstucklex@attglobal.net 
==================
 
  
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