All,
   After testing (thanks Rubens) it appears that the i5's SMTP server does
   not validate incoming addresses during the SMTP transaction as I'd
   originally thought. If it did, then bogus addresses would immediately be
   rejected with a 550 code. Instead, the server accepts the message, as is,
   with a 250 code and sends it to some store-n-forward service inside MSF.
   MSF then validates the addresses at its leisure (500 milliseconds or so)
   and emails a "Non Delivery Report" (NDR) to the sender if it finds a bad
   address.
   This is exactly in accordance with section 6.1 of RFC2821. However
   Spamcop, being possessed of the infinite arrogance of those who "know
   better", has reinterpreted the RFC such that those who send NDRs are now
   considered spam sources and are subject to blacklisting. (See:
   
http://www.spamcop.net/fom-serve/cache/329.html).
   Guess it is time to open an IBM ticket. With any luck there is a way to
   configure the SMTP server so that it can query the SDD before accepting
   the message, but I'm not going to bet the farm on it. The alternative
   would seem to be to store NDRs internally and have our secretary
   periodically review the folder. I'm looking for volunteers to tell her
   that she has another thing to add to her job description...
   JK
   On Tue May 22 16:20 , Scott Klement sent:
     Hi John,
     > Chris: I'm picking my way through unfamiliar terminology here, but
     we're a
     > very small shop and don't have a separate mail gateway. If I
     understand
     > our config correctly, our i5 smtp server grabs anything that the
     router
     > sends to that particular IP address. The email is immediately accepted
     or
     > rejected depending on whether there is an SDD entry.
     Is this true? It will definitely reject mail address to a user with no
     SDD entry -- and it'll do it immediately (not by sending back a
     message)? Did you test that?
     I didn't think the SMTP server knew anything about SDD entries.
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