Just curious why you feel it is nearly valueless. For some time now I have been using content control to basically accomplish the same thing as SPF for all the major banks in my area and such services as ebay. this even works pretty good for hotmail, google and all the other big senders. It's been my experience that not much spam REALLY comes from these domains but most of the spam attempts to pretend it does. These rules work well but take a lot of work to get implemented initially.
if sender contains "ebay.com" weight 51
if header "received" matches "*.ebay.com (66.135.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com"
if header "received" matches "*.ebay.com (216.33.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com"
if header "received" matches "*ebay.com (66.211.161.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com"
if sender contains "cibc." weight 51
if sender contains "preschoicefinancial.com" weight 51
if sender contains "pcfinancial.ca" weight 51
if header "received" matches "*cibc.ca (199.198.2*) by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real CIBC"
I realize this isn't foolproof but I think SPF would be. To have a spam free world you need a bunch of different tools in your arsenault and SPF would just add another one to it. These rules have on occasion caught stuff that made it by spamhalter. I think SPF would give me the ability to never again get another phishing email. I wouldn't want to use it for everything but for certain domains (banking, financial, etc) it would be invaluable.
With all the various tools available to me, my users on average might might get one spam email a month. For this I Love mercury and the tools that come with it. Content control, transaction filters, graywall and spamhalter. I'd personally like to see SPF added but if not - oh well.
On another note. I'd really like to pay you for mercury. How close is the licensing?
Jim
<p>Just curious why you feel it is nearly valueless.&nbsp; For some time now I have been using content control to basically accomplish the same thing as SPF for all the major banks in my area and such services as ebay.&nbsp; this even works pretty good for hotmail, google and all the other big senders.&nbsp; It's been my experience that not much spam REALLY comes from these domains but most of the spam attempts to pretend it does. These rules work well but take a lot of work to get implemented initially.
</p><p>if sender contains "ebay.com" weight 51
if header "received" matches "*.ebay.com (66.135.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com"
if header "received" matches "*.ebay.com (216.33.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com"
if header "received" matches "*ebay.com (66.211.161.*by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real ebay.com" </p><p>if sender contains "cibc." weight 51
if sender contains "preschoicefinancial.com" weight 51
if sender contains "pcfinancial.ca" weight 51
if header "received" matches "*cibc.ca (199.198.2*) by mercurymailsystem.ca*" weight -1999 tag "real CIBC"
</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>I realize this isn't foolproof but I think SPF would be.&nbsp; To have a spam free world you need a bunch of different tools in your arsenault and SPF would just add another one to it.&nbsp; These rules have on occasion caught stuff that made it by spamhalter. I think SPF would give me the ability to never again get another phishing email.&nbsp; I wouldn't want to use it for everything but for certain domains (banking, financial, etc) it would be invaluable.</p><p>With all the various tools available to me, my users on average might might get one spam email a month. For this I Love mercury and the tools that come with it. Content control, transaction filters, graywall and spamhalter.&nbsp; I'd personally like to see SPF added but if not - oh well.&nbsp; </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>On another note.&nbsp; I'd really like to pay you for mercury. How close is the licensing?&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Jim&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>