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 Posted by Dave Smithz on 10/22/05 17:11 
"Gordon Burditt" <gordon@hammy.burditt.org> wrote in message  
news:11li9u1ldslq2b2@corp.supernews.com... 
> Some mail transports honor the "Errors-To:" header for bounces. 
> Many mail clients honor the "Reply-To:" header for responses, and 
> for those that don't, you could put the same address in the From: 
> header if the transport you are sending mail through lets you 
> fake addresses in this way. 
> 
> This may not work 100%.  Note that it's not just *YOUR* mail transport 
> that needs to honor "Errors-To:", it's all of them that your 
> badly-addressed mail might go through. 
 
So it sounds like the "Errors-to" is not something I can rely on (Also the  
php mailer class does not seem to support this). In which case this leaves  
me thinking the following. 
 
I could make the "from" email address be the one where I would want the  
technical problem (e.g. no email address) bounce backs. And then set the  
"reply-To" to be the address which receivers of the email would reply to if  
they were sending an email back. 
I think this would work but would leave the email address as if it was  
received from the email address set to receive bounce backs (could cause  
confusion with customers). 
 
Is there any other way of getting around this or is my above mentioned  
method the best? 
 
Kind regards 
 
Dave
 
  
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