I am currently developing an email server in C, and the end goal is to be able to send millions of emails to millions of people every day. Many organizations have email lists with large numbers of users that they email every week/month/etc.
The big question: how can I prevent the server and the emails from being marked as a spam? All of the SPAM-prevention stuff I've seen so far deals mostly with poor configurations, or at least does not require large numbers of emails to be send every hour. I have yet to see anything that addresses the scope of millions-of-emails-per-hour.
Here are some assumptions you can make:
- EVERY single email sent is legitimate
- all SPF records and MX records are accurate, up-to-date, and valid
- all other common SPAM-prevention tactics are being used (reverse DNS is good, DKIM is used, return-addresses are valid, etc etc etc)
- emails are one-to-one (ie, I'm not CC'ing 1000 gmail addresses; I'm sending one email to each address)
Here are some questions to get us moving in the right direction:
- should I limit the number of emails sent to X emails per minute per domain? If so, how do sites like GMail and MailChimp get around this? note: there are no ISP restrictions; this is only an issue for the receiving mail server...
- should I limit the number of connections to a domain at a given time? (eg, will Google think I'm a spam agent if I open 10/100/1000 simultaneous connections to gmail servers?)
- how many bounce-backs (5xx errors on an address) should I accept for automatically removing that email from a subscription list? does this affect a server's spam rating?
- is there anything else I should or should not do?
Final note: please remember this is a programming question, NOT a library question - I don't want to use someone else's service; we are writing our own for a reason. I'm looking for practical programming advice.