When I call my UNIX guys down at my ISP, and tell them I want any
non-addressed mail to be redirected to a specific mailbox, they just hop
right to it and have no problems setting this up.
This must be a shortcomming of Exchange, that it cannot use wildcard mail
addressing. Perhaps Microsoft has not figured out a way to prioritize
addresses in the MTA and therefore, a wildcard address might just steal all
mail from its intended mailboxes?
Basically, I want 'sa...@domain.com', 'de...@domain.com' e...@domain.com to
all go to the same mailbox. Including any other which may be used on our
website that I am not aware of. Because there is this ambiguity about what
my HTML people are using as feedback addresses, I cannot specifically set
these up.
Any suggestings would be appreciated.
--
Jack Stockholm
ad...@mail.summation.com
You can make any wrong addressed mail got any box you wish by denoting the
desired email box under your NDR preferences.
You cannot, however, disable the NDR.. as that is specified in the RFC.
And you can add as many SMTP addresses to any individual mailbox (or folder)
as you wish..
Hope this helps a bit..
Christian
Jack Stockholm <stockho...@summation.com> wrote in message
news:u9CoxGTf#GA.269@cppssbbsa03...
Chris Scharff
Exchange Administrator
BV Solutions Group
#include std_disclaim.h
"Jack Stockholm" <stockho...@summation.com> is rumored to have
said:
>Has no one ever had the need to capture all non-specifically addressed mail
>without generating an NDR? I want the equivalent of '*@domain.com'
>