Suppose we have an application that acts as a middleman, allowing Company A to send reports to their customers.
Company A --> Company B (me)--> Company A's customers
After getting the report we send email notifications to the recipients, but they necessarily originate from our company notifications email address e.g.
joe.bloggs@a.com --> notifications@b.com --> peter@c.com
Now, customers tend to reply to those email notifications, wanting them to go back to whoever sent the report at Company A. Instead, they end up back at our address, notifications@b.com.
A simple solution may be to change the Reply-To header on the notifications we send to the relevant Company A address e.g.
joe.bloggs@a.com --> notifications@b.com [Reply-To: joe.bloggs@a.com] --> peter@c.com
But my main concerns are:
- the complete discrepancy in email address and domain between the From and Reply-To fields might make spam or phishing filters more eager to flag the emails
- not all email clients may respect the Reply-To field when people actually click "Reply", and just use From instead. A lesser concern, unless widespread.
Are these concerns founded at all? Or, are there other concerns I should have?
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