Hi all,
A major component of our application sends email to members on behalf of other members. Currently we set the "From" address to our system address and use a "Reply-to" header with the
member's address. The issue is that replies from some email clients (and auto-replies/bounces) don't respect the "Reply-to" header so get sent to our system address, effectively sending them to a black hole. We're considering setting the "From" address to our
member's address, and the "Sender" address to our system address. It appears this way would pass SPF and Sender-ID checks.
Are there any reasons not to switch to this method? Are there any other potential issues?
Thanks in advance,
-Paul
Here are way more details than you probably need:
When the application was first developed, we just changed the "from" address to be that of the sending
member as that was the common practice at the time (this was many years ago). We later changed that to have the "from" address be the
member's name and our address, i.e.,
From: "Mary Smith" <
[email protected]>
With a "reply-to" header set to the
member's address:
Reply-To: "Mary Smith" <
[email protected]>
This helped with messages being mis-categorized as spam. As SPF became more popular, we added an additional header that would work in conjunction with our SPF records:
Sender: <
[email protected]>
Things work OK, but it turns out that, in practice, some email clients and most MTA's don't respect the "Reply-To" header. Because of this, many members send messages to
[email protected] instead of the desired
member.
So, I started envisioning various schemes to add data about the sender to the email headers or encode it in the "from" email address so that we could process the response and redirect appropriately. For example,
From: "Mary Smith" <
[email protected]>
where the string after "messages" is a hash representing Mary Smith's
member in our system. Of course, that path could lead to a lot of pain as we need to develop MTA functionality for our system address. I was looking again at the SPF documentation and found this page interesting:
http://www.openspf.org/Best_Practices/Webgenerated
They show two examples, that of evite.com and that of egreetings.com. Basically, evite.com is doing it the way we're doing it. The egreetings.com example uses the
member's from address with an added "Sender" header.
So the question is, are there any potential issues with using the egreetings method of the
member's from address with a sender header? That would eliminate the replies that bad clients send to the system address. I don't believe that it solves the bounce/vacation/whitelist issue since those often send to the MAIL FROM even if Return Path is specified.