InTheMarket
Perch
Hi Folks,
Can someone help me to understand what spf settings should be used?
I have a client that has several domain name email addresses that are being used. He didn't want any email boxes and wanted all email forwarded to a different place. I setup all the email addresses so they only forward. He is getting a number of bounces and other problems. I am guessing that at least part of the problem might be the spf policy that is being used currently but I really don't know.
After reading up a lot on spf policies I am more confused than ever as to what they do and how they work.
The four choices are:
fail: the mail is a forgery, and you can reject it with confidence.
softfail: the message could be a forgery.
pass: the mail is not forged, but that doesn't mean it's legitimate.
neutral: The domain owner has explicitly stated that doesn't know whether the IP is authorized or not.
It is currently set to "fail"
Could that be contributing to the problem possibly?
Should it be set to something else?
Thanks!
Can someone help me to understand what spf settings should be used?
I have a client that has several domain name email addresses that are being used. He didn't want any email boxes and wanted all email forwarded to a different place. I setup all the email addresses so they only forward. He is getting a number of bounces and other problems. I am guessing that at least part of the problem might be the spf policy that is being used currently but I really don't know.
After reading up a lot on spf policies I am more confused than ever as to what they do and how they work.
The four choices are:
fail: the mail is a forgery, and you can reject it with confidence.
softfail: the message could be a forgery.
pass: the mail is not forged, but that doesn't mean it's legitimate.
neutral: The domain owner has explicitly stated that doesn't know whether the IP is authorized or not.
It is currently set to "fail"
Could that be contributing to the problem possibly?
Should it be set to something else?
Thanks!