Thank you, Thomas.
Although I use Mercury S for some mail, for most things I use my ISP and, as you indicated, with a POP3 connection.
Although the X-Originating IP header might not be totally reliable, I use it as part of my anti-SPAM strategy. In fact messages via my ISP sometimes show more than one X-Originating IP headers, but this is easy to sort out. I reject all mail addressed to my personal addresses that comes from any country other than Canada, US, UK and Australia, unless a specific address has been whitelisted. To do this, I look up the IP address to determine the country of origin. This is not totally foolproof, but it works pretty well and probably gets rid of 90% of the SPAM. For the remainder, I check two of the more reliable DNSBLs.
I don't use the X-Originating IP header for "commercial" mail, as each of my commercial contacts has been assigned a different e-mail address (my ISPs call these "disposable addresses"). When any of these addresses get compromised, I just change them for the specific commercial contact. This has rarely happened.
You have made me wonder about whether I could extract the connecting IP address from (presumably) the Mercury log.
I know that there are other ways for dealing with SPAM, but this works well for me and the X-Originating IP header is a key part. This all started when I only used my ISP as my mail source and some of the SPAM-fighting tools were not applicable (e.g. Graywall).
Gordon
<P>Thank you, Thomas.&nbsp;&nbsp;</P>
<P>&nbsp;Although I use Mercury S for some mail, for most things I use my ISP and, as you indicated, with a POP3 connection.&nbsp; </P>
<P>Although the X-Originating IP header might not be totally reliable, I use it as part of my anti-SPAM strategy.&nbsp; In fact messages via my ISP sometimes show more than one X-Originating IP headers, but this is easy to sort out.&nbsp; I reject all mail addressed to my personal addresses that comes from any country other than Canada, US, UK and Australia, unless a specific address has been whitelisted.&nbsp; To do this, I look up the IP address to determine the country of origin.&nbsp; This is not totally foolproof, but it works pretty well&nbsp;and probably gets rid of 90% of the SPAM.&nbsp; For the remainder, I check two of the more reliable DNSBLs.</P>
<P>I don't use the X-Originating IP header for "commercial" mail, as each of my commercial contacts has been assigned a different e-mail address (my ISPs call these "disposable addresses").&nbsp; When any of these addresses get compromised, I just change them for the specific commercial contact.&nbsp; This has rarely happened.</P>
<P>You have made me wonder about whether I could extract the connecting IP address from (presumably) the Mercury log.</P>
<P>I know that there are other ways for dealing with SPAM, but this works well for me and the X-Originating IP header is a key part.&nbsp; This all started when I only used my ISP as my mail source and some of the SPAM-fighting tools were not applicable (e.g. Graywall).</P>
<P>Gordon</P>