On 8/27/2004 9:04 PM, CMead wrote: > Receiving bouced mail errors at "[log in to unmask]" address > with the following error. It appears that mail sent > to "[log in to unmask]" is not being properly handled. > Anyone have any sugestions? > > The enclosed message has been identified as a delivery error for > the "listname" list because it was sent to [log in to unmask] > name.COM'. The address [log in to unmask] is used as the envelope sender address on messages posted to the 'listname' list hosted on list.domain-name.com. The envelope sender address is the address to which delivery error messages should be sent. If the list is configured with the auto-delete feature enabled (Auto-Delete= Yes,...), LISTSERV will attempt to process the delivery error message and take appropriate action, based on the nature of the error and the list's auto-delete setting. If auto-delete is set to 'No', the address which generated the error is not subscribed to the list, or LISTSERV is unable to parse the delivery error message, LISTSERV will forward the delivery error message to the list owner with the explanatory text you quoted. Check to see if the address which generated the error is subscribed to the list. If it is, and the error is of a permanent nature, indicated by a 500-level error code, you should probably delete the subscriber from the list. If the error is of a transient nature, indicated by a 400-level error code, you may want to wait and see whether you get subsequent errors for the same subscriber. If the address is not subscribed, and the error message includes the full headers from the list posting, review the headers to determine whether the message was forwarded to the address which generated the error. If so, check the list for the address to which the message was originally sent. You may need search the subscriber list for subscriptions with the same username, but slightly different domain name (ex: [log in to unmask] vs [log in to unmask]), or for similar usernames in the same domain (ex: [log in to unmask] vs [log in to unmask]). It is possible that the message you received was not the result of a delivery error on a message from your list server. It is possible that the owner- address was harvested from someone's local mail archive by a mass-mailing virus. I have also seen spam sent to owner- addresses. -- Paul Russell Senior Systems Administrator OIT Messaging Services Team University of Notre Dame