I am 99.9% certain that PMs (emails) used to identify the sender by username.
Now ALL of them say they are from "robot@mg.grassrootsmotorsports.com". Nothing more.
It gets really confusing when there are several emails in my inbox from different users and they all say they are from "robot@mg.grassrootsmotorsports.com".
Can we get back to identifying the sender by username?
dculberson said:Joke's on you, all those PMs are from an actual robot they just turned on at the new GRM HQ.
In reply to Tom Suddard :
Deliverability to me?
I ignore it sometimes. Anything that says "robot" on it can't be too important.
Plus, honestly there may be some people here who I don't really want to talk with.
bobzilla said:In reply to SV reX :
Its why I have been leaving my name.
Yes, but you are not the only "Bob" I know.
In reply to Tom Suddard :
Is there a way to include the user name, though? So it could be "from" the robot, but include the sender's user name in the subject or body of the message. Otherwise it's a total mystery as to who a message is from.
In reply to dculberson :
Exactly.
I have several different conversations in my inbox right now, and I don't know who they are.
(I figured it out, but if it gets any worse I will block the GRM robot entirely)
Most people who send a PM have no idea they need to sign their name.
Plus, many people I know ONLY by their username. I don't necessarily know who is sending a message if they use their real name.
In reply to 1988RedT2 :
That comment seems a little unnecessary.
Is it unreasonable for me to want to know who is sending me messages?
The good thing is if you respond it gives you heir name in the response so just email them back a quesion so they have to answer and boom! Name aquired.
My gmail stacks the pm's under one email chain convo until I reply to them. I dont know who I'm talking to (unless stated) until I reply
SV reX said:In reply to 1988RedT2 :
That comment seems a little unnecessary.
Is it unreasonable for me to want to know who is sending me messages?
Please note little smiley indicating a light-hearted comment.
All I'm saying is (and not singling out anyone) is that GRM provides a free service and many people find fault with it.
Email geek here - not GRM's email geek though. Tom is correct that this was a needed change for deliverabilty as the prior "impersonation" approach is very problematic these days (fails SPF checks for starters and that is bad). Sending it as the robot from their own domain fixes this at the expense of having the real sender in reply-to.
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