testing email deliverability... [message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 00:48 |
The Natural Philosoph
Messages: 993 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set
in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
Mailer is exim, and that's currently but not necessarily invoked by the
php mail() function.
what I want is a function like
is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup,
then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
existing code.
anyone done this?
--
Ineptocracy
(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to
lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the
members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are
rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a
diminishing number of producers.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186038 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 01:40 |
Keith Keller
Messages: 5 Registered: June 2014
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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["Followup-To:" header set to comp.os.linux.misc.]
On 2014-06-05, The Natural Philosopher <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> wrote:
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set
> in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
There is absolutely no way to do this for arbitrary domains. Some
MXs will accept all mail addressed to it, then decide later how to
handle the message (discard, bounce, deliver).
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup,
> then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
It's not even possible (for an arbitrary domain) *with* doing an MX
lookup and connecting to port 25. It will be possible for some MXs but
not all, and there's no way of determining ahead of time whether a
domain will do this for you or not. This is why many sites require
separate confirmation by sending email to the target with a link that
verifies that the recipient actually received the mail.
--keith
--
kkeller-usenet(at)wombat(dot)san-francisco(dot)ca(dot)us
(try just my userid to email me)
AOLSFAQ=http://www.therockgarden.ca/aolsfaq.txt
see X- headers for PGP signature information
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186039 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 02:47 |
Tony Marston
Messages: 57 Registered: November 2010
Karma: 0
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Member |
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"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
news:lmoeok$5v6$1(at)news(dot)albasani(dot)net...
>
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set in
> a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
>
>
> Mailer is exim, and that's currently but not necessarily invoked by the php
> mail() function.
>
>
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes the
> spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup, then
> connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>
> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
> existing code.
>
> anyone done this?
>
>
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message
news:lmoeok$5v6$1(at)news(dot)albasani(dot)net...
>
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set in
> a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
>
>
> Mailer is exim, and that's currently but not necessarily invoked by the php
> mail() function.
>
>
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes the
> spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup, then
> connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>
> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
> existing code.
>
> anyone done this?
>
>
You can use the filter_var() function at
http://uk3.php.net/manual/en/function.filter-var.php to check that an email
address is syntactically valid, but you cannot check that an email exists
without sending an email and getting a response back.
--
Tony Marston
http://www.tonymarston.net
http://www.radicore.org
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186040 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 03:04 |
Sam[1]
Messages: 1 Registered: June 2014
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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The Natural Philosopher writes:
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes the
> spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup, then
> connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
I'm afraid that you will have to wait until someone invents a telepathic
computer, that will be able to accomplishing such an amazinf feat.
Until then, unfortunately, a number of inconvenient laws of physics of this
universe will prevent anyone from determining whether an email address is
deliverable without looking up its MX server, and connecting to the MX
server's port 25.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186041 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 03:05 |
Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 6/4/2014 8:48 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set
> in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
>
>
> Mailer is exim, and that's currently but not necessarily invoked by the
> php mail() function.
>
>
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup,
> then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>
> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
> existing code.
>
> anyone done this?
>
>
The only way you can do this is to send an email to the address they
specify and require a response. While you can determine if a domain
name is invalid, there is no way to determine whether an email within a
domain is valid without requiring a response from that email address.
I know you won't see this, but others who might have a similar question
will.
--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
==================
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186042 is a reply to message #186040] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 03:27 |
Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 6/4/2014 11:04 PM, Sam wrote:
> The Natural Philosopher writes:
>
>> what I want is a function like
>>
>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>>
>> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
>> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx
>> lookup, then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> I'm afraid that you will have to wait until someone invents a telepathic
> computer, that will be able to accomplishing such an amazinf feat.
>
> Until then, unfortunately, a number of inconvenient laws of physics of
> this universe will prevent anyone from determining whether an email
> address is deliverable without looking up its MX server, and connecting
> to the MX server's port 25.
>
Even then you don't know if the email address is valid. May mail
servers are set to accept and trash invalid email addresses. This is
because spammers would send emails to random accounts at an email
address; if they didn't get a reject they knew the address was OK.
--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
==================
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186043 is a reply to message #186040] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 04:37 |
The Natural Philosoph
Messages: 993 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 05/06/14 04:04, Sam wrote:
> The Natural Philosopher writes:
>
>> what I want is a function like
>>
>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>>
>> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
>> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx
>> lookup, then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> I'm afraid that you will have to wait until someone invents a telepathic
> computer, that will be able to accomplishing such an amazinf feat.
>
> Until then, unfortunately, a number of inconvenient laws of physics of
> this universe will prevent anyone from determining whether an email
> address is deliverable without looking up its MX server, and connecting
> to the MX server's port 25.
>
I meant without me having to write such code,, but it seems someone
already hass..
http://www.tienhuis.nl/files/email_verify_source.php
--
Ineptocracy
(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to
lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the
members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are
rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a
diminishing number of producers.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186044 is a reply to message #186039] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 04:53 |
Eli the Bearded
Messages: 22 Registered: April 2011
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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In comp.os.linux.misc, Tony Marston <TonyMarston(at)hotmail(dot)com> wrote:
> "The Natural Philosopher" wrote:
>> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set in
>> a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
I'd like to verify that the lottery number is going to win before I buy the
ticket. Unfortunely I don't think either of us is going to be happy.
>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
Did you think that you are the first person to want this? Think how useful
it would be for spammers to find new email addresses before sending email!
> You can use the filter_var() function at
> http://uk3.php.net/manual/en/function.filter-var.php to check that an email
> address is syntactically valid, but you cannot check that an email exists
> without sending an email and getting a response back.
I have NEVER seen a "syntactically valid" check that really works. The
comments on that page list many valid addresses that don't work. (And
many validators wrongly think I post from an invalid address, but it's
syntactically valid and a working mail alias.)
Elijah
------
and some "syntactically invalid" addresses work well in practice
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186045 is a reply to message #186043] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 04:55 |
Keith Keller
Messages: 5 Registered: June 2014
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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["Followup-To:" header set to comp.os.linux.misc.]
On 2014-06-05, The Natural Philosopher <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> wrote:
>
> I meant without me having to write such code,, but it seems someone
> already hass..
>
> http://www.tienhuis.nl/files/email_verify_source.php
As I and others have already stated, this method is not reliable in
general, as some MXs will accept all email for its domains whether
the destination address is valid or not, in order to defeat exactly this
sort of query (done by spammers, but what defeats them defeats this
too).
All this script will do is tell you whether the MX accepted the message.
It can never tell you whether the MX delivered it to a valid mailbox,
discarded it, or generated a bounce.
--keith
--
kkeller-usenet(at)wombat(dot)san-francisco(dot)ca(dot)us
(try just my userid to email me)
AOLSFAQ=http://www.therockgarden.ca/aolsfaq.txt
see X- headers for PGP signature information
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186047 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 10:59 |
AvdB
Messages: 2 Registered: July 2013
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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"The Natural Philosopher" <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> schreef in bericht
news:lmoeok$5v6$1(at)news(dot)albasani(dot)net...
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes the
> spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup, then
> connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>
> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
> existing code.
As an idea to work on:
is_valid_mail() checks your database for known users.
If unknown, display a 'verify first' page.
Present a unique code which the user has to mail back to you.
Still not 100% save, but if a user can send using a certain address, there's
reason to believe he can receive as well. Add the user to your database.
Not enough?
Make it a three way handshake.
The user mails you his code, your autoresponder sends (after verifying the
code, obviously) another unique code.
Your form checks { is_valid_mail() or presents_valid_code() }
You now have proof email traffic is possible in both directions.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186048 is a reply to message #186047] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 12:51 |
The Natural Philosoph
Messages: 993 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 05/06/14 11:59, AvdB wrote:
> "The Natural Philosopher" <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> schreef in bericht
> news:lmoeok$5v6$1(at)news(dot)albasani(dot)net...
>> what I want is a function like
>>
>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>>
>> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
>> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx
>> lookup, then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>>
>> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>>
>> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
>> existing code.
>
> As an idea to work on:
>
> is_valid_mail() checks your database for known users.
There are no known users.
Or hey wouldn't be using the contact page.
> If unknown, display a 'verify first' page.
> Present a unique code which the user has to mail back to you.
> Still not 100% save, but if a user can send using a certain address,
> there's reason to believe he can receive as well. Add the user to your
> database.
Making it bloody awkward for genuine users defeats the purpose.
>
> Not enough?
> Make it a three way handshake.
> The user mails you his code, your autoresponder sends (after verifying
> the code, obviously) another unique code.
> Your form checks { is_valid_mail() or presents_valid_code() }
> You now have proof email traffic is possible in both directions.
>
>
At this point genuine enquirers have simply buggered off elsewhere.
>
--
Ineptocracy
(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to
lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the
members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are
rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a
diminishing number of producers.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186051 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 18:39 |
Adrienne Boswell
Messages: 25 Registered: October 2010
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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The Natural Philosopher <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> wrote
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address
set
> in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site
administrators.
>
>
> Mailer is exim, and that's currently but not necessarily invoked by the
> php mail() function.
>
>
> what I want is a function like
>
> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>
> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx lookup,
> then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>
> exim -bt tells me if the domain is valid, but not the user.
>
> I am not particular how its achieved - anything can be merged into the
> existing code.
>
> anyone done this?
>
>
As others have said, there really is no reliable way to do this, other
than actually sending an email and waiting for a response. Groupmail by
Infacta does have the ability to verify addresses in a list. It waits
for a response back and whatever the undeliverable response is, invalid
domain, invalid user, full mailbox, etc. This allows you to keep clean
email lists.
But, that is not going to help you in your application. I have several
email addresses, and if I want a response back to something, then I use
my primary email address. If it's something I think is going to add me
to some mailing list, then I use one of the other ones.
So, you could put something on your form like:
"Please use a valid email address. Your issue will not be addressed if
our email to you is returned."
--
Adrienne Boswell
Arbpen Web Site Design Services - http://www.cavalcade-of-coding.info/
The Good Plate - Fresh Gourmet Recipes - http://the-good-plate.com/
Please respond to the group so others can share
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186052 is a reply to message #186037] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 20:14 |
James Moe
Messages: 1 Registered: June 2014
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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On 06/04/2014 05:48 PM, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
There are numerous methods to defeat robo-spammers. The simplest is to
require the sendee to enter a specific text into a field; the text is on
the web page itself, e.g., "Enter 'no-spam-4-me.'" You obviously need to
verify the text when receiving a post. This works quite well for us.
--
James Moe
jmm-list at sohnen-moe dot com
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186053 is a reply to message #186051] |
Thu, 05 June 2014 20:46 |
Eli the Bearded
Messages: 22 Registered: April 2011
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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In comp.lang.php, Adrienne Boswell <arbpen(at)yahoo(dot)com> wrote:
> The Natural Philosopher <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> wrote
>> what I want is a function like
>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
> So, you could put something on your form like:
>
> "Please use a valid email address. Your issue will not be addressed if
> our email to you is returned."
If anyone believed that, Usenet would have been gone long ago.
How many people post with valid email addresses? Certainly not
Mr Ineptocracy.
Elijah
------
$ dict natural
[snip]
5 definitions found
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:
[snip]
8. Of or pertaining to the lower or animal nature, as
contrasted with the higher or moral powers, or that which
is spiritual; being in a state of nature; unregenerate.
[1913 Webster]
The natural man receiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God. --1 Cor. ii.
14.
[snip]
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186056 is a reply to message #186043] |
Fri, 06 June 2014 03:36 |
Chuck Anderson
Messages: 63 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Member |
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The Natural Philosopher wrote:
> On 05/06/14 04:04, Sam wrote:
>> The Natural Philosopher writes:
>>
>>> what I want is a function like
>>>
>>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>>>
>>> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
>>> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx
>>> lookup, then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>>
>> I'm afraid that you will have to wait until someone invents a telepathic
>> computer, that will be able to accomplishing such an amazinf feat.
>>
>> Until then, unfortunately, a number of inconvenient laws of physics of
>> this universe will prevent anyone from determining whether an email
>> address is deliverable without looking up its MX server, and connecting
>> to the MX server's port 25.
>>
> I meant without me having to write such code,, but it seems someone
> already hass..
>
> http://www.tienhuis.nl/files/email_verify_source.php
I feel I'm about to step into a giant pile of doo, but .... Some years
back I used a Windows program from Analogx called listmaster pro to
verify email addresses manually (it is designed to be used with large
mail lists. I never verified more than several at a time). It always
gave me correct positive and negative results. It seems to me that, in
general, an email address can be verified as a valid mailbox - or not.
There are no guarantees, of course, but this program always gave me the
correct result.
--
*****************************
Chuck Anderson • Boulder, CO
http://cycletourist.com
Turn Off, Tune Out, Drop In
*****************************
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186060 is a reply to message #186037] |
Fri, 06 June 2014 12:11 |
Arno Welzel
Messages: 317 Registered: October 2011
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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Am 2014-06-05 02:48, schrieb The Natural Philosopher:
> I have web contact pages which are used by anyone to send enquiries.
>
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set
> in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
Without asking the MX you will never know, if the MX is willing to
accept the mail.
And even then - temporary 4xx-failures due to Greylisting are a valid
behaviour as well as failures due to a quota limitation etc. - which all
does *not* mean that the e-mail address is invalid. Unfortunately the
opposite behaviour - accepting a RCPT TO without any error in return -
must not be interpreted as "this is a valid address".
Therefore the usual way to handle this is to send an e-email with a
confirmation request so the user can approve that himself - combined
with a database table to store the pending approvals (which should
timeout after a certain time if no one approves the request - e.g. after
7 days).
--
Arno Welzel
http://arnowelzel.de
http://de-rec-fahrrad.de
http://fahrradzukunft.de
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186061 is a reply to message #186056] |
Fri, 06 June 2014 13:41 |
Jerry Stuckle
Messages: 2598 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 6/5/2014 11:36 PM, Chuck Anderson wrote:
> The Natural Philosopher wrote:
>> On 05/06/14 04:04, Sam wrote:
>>> The Natural Philosopher writes:
>>>
>>>> what I want is a function like
>>>>
>>>> is_valid_mail("user12345(at)gmail(dot)com")
>>>>
>>>> that will return true or false if gmail accepts the user as known (yes
>>>> the spam is always @gmail.com) WITHOUT having to write a dns mx
>>>> lookup, then connect to socket 25 and etc etc etc..
>>>
>>> I'm afraid that you will have to wait until someone invents a telepathic
>>> computer, that will be able to accomplishing such an amazinf feat.
>>>
>>> Until then, unfortunately, a number of inconvenient laws of physics of
>>> this universe will prevent anyone from determining whether an email
>>> address is deliverable without looking up its MX server, and connecting
>>> to the MX server's port 25.
>>>
>> I meant without me having to write such code,, but it seems someone
>> already hass..
>>
>> http://www.tienhuis.nl/files/email_verify_source.php
>
> I feel I'm about to step into a giant pile of doo, but .... Some years
> back I used a Windows program from Analogx called listmaster pro to
> verify email addresses manually (it is designed to be used with large
> mail lists. I never verified more than several at a time). It always
> gave me correct positive and negative results. It seems to me that, in
> general, an email address can be verified as a valid mailbox - or not.
> There are no guarantees, of course, but this program always gave me the
> correct result.
>
And how did it know?
For instance - I have three domains. You can send and email to any
address at any of the three. But unless it's a valid address, the email
ends up in /dev/null.
--
==================
Remove the "x" from my email address
Jerry Stuckle
jstucklex(at)attglobal(dot)net
==================
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186062 is a reply to message #186061] |
Fri, 06 June 2014 14:37 |
Denis McMahon
Messages: 634 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On Fri, 06 Jun 2014 09:41:05 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 6/5/2014 11:36 PM, Chuck Anderson wrote:
>> I feel I'm about to step into a giant pile of doo, but .... Some years
>> back I used a Windows program from Analogx called listmaster pro to
>> verify email addresses manually
> And how did it know?
> For instance - I have three domains. You can send and email to any
> address at any of the three. But unless it's a valid address, the email
> ends up in /dev/null.
Which brings us back round to:
The only way to guarantee that an email address is actually going to the
entity that entered it on your form is to send a verification code to the
email address.
And even then, I suspect that there are some smart spamming systems out
there that have email addresses and use eg curl to process the email
verification links (which is why I use entity and not person above).
--
Denis McMahon, denismfmcmahon(at)gmail(dot)com
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186063 is a reply to message #186062] |
Fri, 06 June 2014 15:46 |
The Natural Philosoph
Messages: 993 Registered: September 2010
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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On 06/06/14 15:37, Denis McMahon wrote:
> On Fri, 06 Jun 2014 09:41:05 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>
>> On 6/5/2014 11:36 PM, Chuck Anderson wrote:
>
>>> I feel I'm about to step into a giant pile of doo, but .... Some years
>>> back I used a Windows program from Analogx called listmaster pro to
>>> verify email addresses manually
>
>> And how did it know?
>
>> For instance - I have three domains. You can send and email to any
>> address at any of the three. But unless it's a valid address, the email
>> ends up in /dev/null.
>
> Which brings us back round to:
>
> The only way to guarantee that an email address is actually going to the
> entity that entered it on your form is to send a verification code to the
> email address.
>
> And even then, I suspect that there are some smart spamming systems out
> there that have email addresses and use eg curl to process the email
> verification links (which is why I use entity and not person above).
>
I juts love all this 'guarantee' when getting spam don from 99 to 1
would be a satisfactory result.
I don't care if I get false negatives ads long as the 99 true negatives
get rejected.
--
Ineptocracy
(in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to
lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the
members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are
rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a
diminishing number of producers.
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186066 is a reply to message #186037] |
Mon, 09 June 2014 12:53 |
Chris Davies
Messages: 6 Registered: June 2012
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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In comp.os.linux.misc The Natural Philosopher <tnp(at)invalid(dot)invalid> wrote:
> I want to make sure that anyone using them has a valid reply address set
> in a web form BEFORE I forward the message on to the site administrators.
Short of emailing the address and waiting for a reply, you can't.
What you can do is determine whether the address is plausible (syntax,
possible delivery, etc.)
Chris
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Re: testing email deliverability... [message #186068 is a reply to message #186065] |
Mon, 09 June 2014 23:08 |
Eli the Bearded
Messages: 22 Registered: April 2011
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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In comp.lang.php, Arno Welzel <usenet(at)arnowelzel(dot)de> wrote:
> Eli the Bearded, 2014-06-05 06:53:
>> I have NEVER seen a "syntactically valid" check that really works. The
> This one should:
> <http://www.ex-parrot.com/~pdw/Mail-RFC822-Address.html>
Did you actually read that page? Right there before the regexp is this
clear warning:
The regular expression does not cope with comments in email
addresses. The RFC allows comments to be arbitrarily nested. A
single regular expression cannot cope with this. The Perl module
pre-processes email addresses to remove comments before applying the
mail regular expression.
That particular test claims RFC822 awareness, but allows "å@å.å" which
does not pass the ASCII-ASCII-ASCII! RFC822 muster or RFC2822 muster,
even if it might be valid now depending on encoding (see RFC6532, which
first allowed non-ASCII email header values back in February 2012).
It also fails the too-rigid test: RFC822 does not allow email addresses
with a localpart that ends with a period, but periods are allowed
everywhere else in a localpart. This test enforces that rule, when real
world mailservers don't care all that much about <rfc822.@example.com>
not being RFC822 kosher.
Elijah
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although a localpart of only periods is likely to fail
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