Email greylisting: Difference between revisions

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a) The transmitter's retry time is not within the minimum and maximum allowed by the greylisting receiver.
a) The transmitter's retry time is not within the minimum and maximum allowed by the greylisting receiver.


b) The retry comes from a different IP address, causing the receiver to not recognize it as a retry. Retry from a different IP is most likely with large organizations that use multiple transmitters.
b) The retry comes from a different IP address, causing the receiver to not recognize it as a retry. Retry from a different IP is most likely with large organizations that use multiple transmitters.[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]

Latest revision as of 17:00, 11 August 2024

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Greylisting involves returning a temporary reject on the theory that only legitimate transmitters will retry after a temporary failure.

Greylisting is controversial as to its long-term effectiveness. If enough spam transmitters add retry capability, greylisting will be like a partially-effective anti-biotic. The pathogen population will mutate to a more resistant form.

On the other hand, a delay will always give more time for new sources to be blacklisted.

Greylisting may result in loss of legitimate mail if:

a) The transmitter's retry time is not within the minimum and maximum allowed by the greylisting receiver.

b) The retry comes from a different IP address, causing the receiver to not recognize it as a retry. Retry from a different IP is most likely with large organizations that use multiple transmitters.