On 2/1/21 6:25 PM, steve lund wrote:
On Mon, Feb 1, 2021 at 12:05 PM Mark Sapiro <mark@msapiro.net> wrote:
So it seems the notices are being sent and delivered to your spam folder. You will need to regularly check that folder for these messages, or you MAY (I'm not an expert on this) be able to create a filter in Gmail to deliver them to some other folder, assuming Gmail filters trump
spam
. For purposes of filtering, these messages areFrom: mailman@<list domain> To: <list_name>-owner@<list domain> Subject: Bounce action notification
Previously, i.e. 6 months ago I was getting these notifications just fine through my Gmail account. This tells me that the list config is correct. I can't explain why these went from no bounce notifications only unsubscribe to now being sent to SPAM folder. Seems like Google is mucking about with its filters!
Probably so, but you can't control that. It may have to do with the specific content of the notices or not. You could try setting up a gmail filter on some of the above the put the message in another folder, or just check your spam folder often.
If I had to guess though, the next most likely thing after DMARC is the sending server was blacklisted by some recipient domains.
This is what I was afraid of. Is there any way of confirming or denying that this is happening. ISP guy complained about having to tell Yahoo the mail server was a mail list and not SPAM. This would tell me that it was a blacklist problem.
So how does an ISP keep their mail server OFF of the SPAM blacklist?
This is all up to the ISP. They can see in their mail logs if they are being blocked and if they are competent, they will notice that and do whatever need to be done to get the blocks removed.
The only thing you can do is report to the ISP if you get a bounce notice that indicated the sending IP is blocked.
I suggest you ensure that all the notifications including bounce_notify_owner_on_bounce_increment are set to Yes and monitor your spam folder so you will at least be aware of any issue before user's delivery is disabled.
-- Mark Sapiro <mark@msapiro.net> The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan