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Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP
From: |
Tom Lane |
Subject: |
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP |
Date: |
Sun, 07 Mar 2021 11:14:44 -0500 |
Bob Carragher <dnc2dnc@gmail.com> writes:
> In emails that I send, if you look at the Received: header chain,
> you'd find a line that resembles,
> Received: from Hikaru (xxxxx.comcast.net. [IP-address])
> by smtp.gmail.com [...]
Received: lines are generally added by each MTA that the message
passes through. In this case it was smtp.gmail.com that added that;
it's not under your control. You can probably modify the "Hikaru"
part, as I believe that just comes from the HELO command your mail
client uses. I'm not sure which part of the nmh configuration
that comes from, but it can't be too hard to find.
Keep in mind that Received: lines that look falsified in any way
are universally treated as a sure sign of spam.
regards, tom lane
Re: Is nmh suitable for managing multiple email accounts?, Conrad Hughes, 2021/03/06
Re: Is nmh suitable for managing multiple email accounts?, Ken Hornstein, 2021/03/06
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP, Bob Carragher, 2021/03/10
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP, Ken Hornstein, 2021/03/10
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP, Bob Carragher, 2021/03/14
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP, Ken Hornstein, 2021/03/14
Re: Hiding one's email source username/hostname/ISP, Bob Carragher, 2021/03/16