In the article posted at http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7328 Meng Wong
states:
The people who developed SPF use eBay, too, and they don't want to lose
e-mail any more than you do. So they came up with a hack. They set up a
whitelist that identifies all these legitimate forgers;
pobox.com<http://pobox.com>is on the list, as are
acm.org <http://acm.org>, eBay and the newspaper Web sites that do "e-mail
me this article".
So how does a legitimate e-mail forwarding service get on this whitelist?
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states:
The people who developed SPF use eBay, too, and they don't want to lose
e-mail any more than you do. So they came up with a hack. They set up a
whitelist that identifies all these legitimate forgers;
pobox.com<http://pobox.com>is on the list, as are
acm.org <http://acm.org>, eBay and the newspaper Web sites that do "e-mail
me this article".
So how does a legitimate e-mail forwarding service get on this whitelist?
-------
To unsubscribe, change your address, or temporarily deactivate your subscription,
please go to http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=srs-discuss@v2.listbox.com