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Spamhaus...
- Subject: Spamhaus...
- From: bonomi at mail.r-bonomi.com (Robert Bonomi)
- Date: Sat, 20 Feb 2010 15:14:02 -0600 (CST)
> From nanog-bounces+bonomi=mail.r-bonomi.com at nanog.org Fri Feb 19 22:32:48 2010
> From: William Herrin <bill at herrin.us>
> Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2010 23:32:10 -0500
> Subject: Re: Spamhaus...
> To: Larry Sheldon <LarrySheldon at cox.net>
> Cc: nanog at nanog.org
>
> On Fri, Feb 19, 2010 at 8:35 PM, Larry Sheldon <LarrySheldon at cox.net> wrote:
> > On 2/19/2010 7:20 PM, William Herrin wrote:
> >> "If an SMTP server has accepted the task of relaying the mail and
> >> later finds that the destination is incorrect or that the mail cannot
> >> be delivered for some other reason, then it MUST construct an
> >> "undeliverable mail" notification message and send it to the
> >> originator of the undeliverable mail (as indicated by the
> >> reverse-path)."
> >
> > Does the RFC say what to do if the reverse-path has been
> > damaged and now points to somebody who had nothing
> > what ever to do with the email?
>
> Hi Larry,
>
> Re-reading the paragraph I quoted and you repeated, I'm going to say
> that the answer is "yes."
>
I'll bite. *HOW* do you send to the _originator_ (as *required* by
the RFC you quoted) of the undeliverable mail, when the reverse path
points to 'someone else'?
Note well the exact lanugage used -- it does not say 'the party named
in the reverse path', the 'claimed sender', 'putative sender' or any
other similar equivocation that justifies sending to a forged address.
It says "the originator". To me, that can be only iterpreted in _one_
way. To wit: as the party that _actually_ created and transmitted the
message, _regardless_ of what the declared return path is.
Since such a message is 'defective' (not RFC-compliant -- because the
true point -of-origin is *NOT* in the reverse path, as it MUST be for
an RFC-compliant message) on it's face, I will argue that there is no
need to apply the 'required' handling for a 'proper' message to it.