Google SMTP acceptance policy?

Steven King sking at kingrst.com
Thu Nov 6 04:30:30 UTC 2008


>From my experience it just takes time. As users mark your email as
legitimate and not as spam your domain will build a good report Google.
Also, try implementing DKIM to help Google to verify the email.

Frank Bulk wrote:
> Have you worked through this Q/A process?
> http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=80369
> I went through it and at the end it says there's not a way to whitelist a
> domain.
>
> For Bulk e-mail senders:
> https://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=17205
>
> There's this checklist, too:
> https://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=81126
>
> And here's a form to fill out:
> https://mail.google.com/support/bin/request.py?ctx=bulksend&nomods=1
>
> Frank
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jonathan Traylor [mailto:jtraylor at networkinglinux.net] 
> Sent: Wednesday, November 05, 2008 8:08 PM
> To: nanog at nanog.org
> Subject: Google SMTP acceptance policy?
>
> Anyone have guidance on how to legimately stay out of Google/GMail's spam
> classifier and arrive at the inbox?
>
> We have a domain that is relatively newly registered, has proper MTA
> configuration and SPF records that I haven't been able to find on any
> blocklist, but GMail sends email from it straight to the spam folder.
>
> I haven't been able to find useful documentation for GMail in this regard
> around the web. Have looked at abuse.net's info, links and resources.
>
> Thanks,
>
> --
> Jonathan
>
>
>
>   

-- 
Steve King

Network Engineer - Liquid Web, Inc.
Cisco Certified Network Associate
CompTIA Linux+ Certified Professional
CompTIA A+ Certified Professional





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