Domain Masking on Email

B

brent.ritter

I'm in an office without an exchange server... we are using Outlook
2003 for our mail. We have mail that has been established for some
time now through our ISP... but we also have email forwarders tied to
our web domain. The outside world can be informed of our forwarders
from
the domain name, but when we reply to them, they will see a different
address in our email header (the one from our ISP). Although I can
change the reply e-mail address so that they are still replying to our
domain mail, they may confuse the ISP address into their contact
managment.

I can add the domain email to the name in the account, but is there a
way to hide or change the signature of the ISPs address to our domain
forwarder? I know we can order a mail service, but we're a non-profit
and we're trying to save as much money as possible, but maximize our
efforts.

Thanks for any help.

-brent
 
B

Brian Tillman

I can add the domain email to the name in the account, but is there a
way to hide or change the signature of the ISPs address to our domain
forwarder? I know we can order a mail service, but we're a non-profit
and we're trying to save as much money as possible, but maximize our
efforts.

You want the headers to reflect your domain name as well? Unless you run
your own mail server, I don't see how. Anyway, why do you care? As long as
the sender address is correct, why would you need anything else?
 
B

brent.ritter

Honestly... I don't care... but my boss will. :) They're wierd about
it, but don't want to spend the money. I can't find a way either...
just thought I'd throw it out there.

Thanks for the reply.
--brent ritter
 
B

Brian Tillman

Honestly... I don't care... but my boss will. :) They're wierd
about it, but don't want to spend the money. I can't find a way
either... just thought I'd throw it out there.

The headers will always reflect the names and addresses of the routers the
messages pass through. If you don't use your own router, then you don't
have a say over how the headers will appear, plain and simple.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top