We don't have postmaster@ or abuse@ set up
RFC 2142 mandates postmaster@ and abuse@ aliases. Some RBLs and large receivers actively check for them.
Try this first
- 1Create postmaster@yourdomain as an alias to the IT mailbox
- 2Create abuse@yourdomain as an alias to IT or the security team
- 3Both must actually receive mail and be read
- 4On reports: fast response helps reputation and compliance
When to bring us in
Ignoring entirely leads to RBL listings and refusal at large receivers.
See also
- Our emails land in spam for some recipientsAlmost always an SPF, DKIM, or DMARC setting that is wrong or missing, or a sender name that mimics a well-known brand.
- Someone reports receiving phishing emails "from us"Read: spoofing. Someone is abusing your sender name, not necessarily your actual mailbox.
- An email bounces (NDR): delivery failedThe NDR text usually states the exact reason. Reading it is step one.
None of the above fits?
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