That's weird. And nothing in the Gmail spam folder?
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That's weird. And nothing in the Gmail spam folder?
I am nowhere near anything like an IT person, and all of my information is second-hand through speaking with my IT folk at work (college campus). This is a problem that they deal with regularly. Students frequently forward their gmail, etc. to their campus email account. When one of the forwarded messages, or a group of messages, gets tagged as spam, the source server gets blacklisted. Then, additional students have their forwarded emails blocked, and the cascade of blocking begins. IT will lift the block, and then another instance starts the process over again. This happened when we migrated to a new server. Somehow, our IT folk have found a workaround, but it's on the receiving end and not the originating end. I think that it is accomplished by maintaining a 'whitelist of accepted domains'. I do still receive an occasional request for help from Nigerian princes, and offers for 'enhancements,' but overall things work decently well. So, this is a solution on the receiving end and is the result of interaction with what amounts to my ISP. I have a problem, we talk, and a fix is put in place if possible.
Another type of problem arises when I am on a site like NYTimes and try to email an article to myself. If I enter my own email address in the sender field, the email will be rejected once it arrives because it is from a user listed within my domain, but comes from a site that is not in our domain. I am able to add servers to a personal whitelist to avoid this.
Again, I'm no IT. I thought I'd share my experience in the event that it might be helpful, or spark an idea that could be the start of a solution to the problems being experienced.
Ok..."if" it is on the receiving end, what do we do on Gmail to correct the problem???