Avatar of Member_2_4371340
Member_2_4371340Flag for Israel

asked on 

How to strip initial headers from POP3 clients sending mail through Exchange 2003 Server.

Hi,

I have 3 clients based in the US who connect to our mail server in Dublin via POP3 clients (Outlook 2007). When I ope the header's in their emails, I see the initial header states the public IP address of their home broadband connection, then the next header shows the IP off our Exchange server.

Is their any way of stripping the initial header from the emails as the pass through our Exchange server?

I'm finding that the US staff are occasionally getting their mail blocked due to blacklists of their home dynamic IP addresses.

Cheers,
Fin
Exchange

Avatar of undefined
Last Comment
Member_2_4371340
Avatar of BBRazz
BBRazz
Flag of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland image

I think it would be an easier task to set the users up to use RPC over HTTP rather than connecting via POP. This way, the users appear local and can still get there email from any internet connection without the use for a VPN or 3rd Party Connection.
Avatar of Member_2_4371340

ASKER

I already have Outlook over RPC set up on the server, but this does not suit non-Windows clients.

I need to know if it's possible to strip the original headers from an email sent by a POP3 client through a Exchange server, replacing the header with the Exchange server's header.
Avatar of Member_2_4371340

ASKER

I basically want all emails sent through our mail server to look as they originated from our mail server, as this will stop emails from our POP3 users getting blacklisted due to the public IP addresses of their home networks getting blacklisted.
ASKER CERTIFIED SOLUTION
Avatar of Member_2_4371340
Member_2_4371340
Flag of Israel image

Blurred text
THIS SOLUTION IS ONLY AVAILABLE TO MEMBERS.
View this solution by signing up for a free trial.
Members can start a 7-Day free trial and enjoy unlimited access to the platform.
See Pricing Options
Start Free Trial
Exchange
Exchange

Exchange is the server side of a collaborative application product that is part of the Microsoft Server infrastructure. Exchange's major features include email, calendaring, contacts and tasks, support for mobile and web-based access to information, and support for data storage.

213K
Questions
--
Followers
--
Top Experts
Get a personalized solution from industry experts
Ask the experts
Read over 600 more reviews

TRUSTED BY

IBM logoIntel logoMicrosoft logoUbisoft logoSAP logo
Qualcomm logoCitrix Systems logoWorkday logoErnst & Young logo
High performer badgeUsers love us badge
LinkedIn logoFacebook logoX logoInstagram logoTikTok logoYouTube logo