![]() ![]() I know from DroidScript, that if I query my phone 127.0.0.1 is one of the valid IP addresses it could show for it.įor their part as you will have seen, the K9 developers state that a duly authenticated user should not have to worry about all this, asking why would a logged in authenticated user be filtered as potential spam?Īs a User I can not understand why such mail would die unnotified? If it is effectively (from the User’s persoective) being “rejected”, wouldn’t it be helpful for it to be returned to “sender” with an appropriate message added to the top of it, rather than just going into a black hole? Yes you are right, the K9 developers have wanted to provide some sort of client privacy protection as you have shared. My message to Hostgator got a lengthy reply from a Tier Administrator which I answered in this way (I’m waiting for another response) … "That hostgator is silently dumping this mail is not standard practice and makes matters even worse. ![]() Presenting a fixed value is a reasonable approach. In addition to privacy issues, the IPnumber or name that a mobile device or desktop machine presents has a low probability of resolving correctly (forward and reverse) so should (as is the standard practice) be ignored in an authenticated context. "Do what you want in terms of filtering on smtp/25, but on the submission/587 & 465 ports, which are (intended to be) authenticated, filtering on things like the EHLO is foolish and counter productive. It may be worth pushing that forward from your end using that reference.įor Hostgator technical, can this be fixed please? It stops us sending mail …Ī quote from the K9 Email app developer “njeyaakili” onĥ.8 showing as sent, but not always arriving at destination - #18 by njeyaakiliĪlso refering to this technical discussion … Ok, thre is a Hostgator “cases-support”: issue:Ĭase :: 34226747 - HostGator-HostGator-Email-Send/Receive Mail Issues
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