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tripleee
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Off-topic: "My email isn't spam"

I am attempting to clarify the scope of the posting guidelines related to evading spam filters. My interpretation of the site policies is that these questions should be closed as off-topic, and that there isn't usually another site in the SE network to refer them to. Is my interpretation correct?

In the tag, I routinely flag the following for closing as off-topic.

  • My email is blocked by Gmail as spam, what can I do?
  • My email is blocked as spam, how do I configure PTR / SPF / DKIM / what not?
  • My email is blocked as spam, how can I reformat it so it goes through?

Tangentially, there is also

  • Help, my system was hacked and is transmitting spam
  • Help, my system is blacklisted by a DNSBL or similar reputation provider

Obviously, none of these topics are programming-related.

  • There is no way to programmatically influence (say) Gmail's company-internal decisions for what to block -- and if you find a way to bypass one particular filter of theirs, it's only a matter of time before the spammers notice, too; and so any useful answer will be extremely volatile, and likely to be obsolete by the time a reader visits the question. Furthermore, answers detailing how to bypass a spam filter are likely to be picked up by spammers, and thus are ethically borderline at the very least.

  • Configuring DNS and related infrastructure obviously belongs on https://serverfault.com/ (though will likely be closed as a duplicate there, I guess).

  • The third topic really goes by the same reasoning as the first -- even if changing which headers are transmitted might coincidentally involve some programming, email deliverability as such is not a programming topic (and in fact, I don't believe there is a place in the Stack Exchange network for this particular topic currently). What to put in your message in order to bypass one or more spam filters is fundamentally a content question, not a logic question.

Now, my close votes have generally been accepted, though not always so; and now, one correspondent is challenging my close vote. Thus I am posting here in the hope that my reasoning could be either refuted, or accepted as a consensus interpretation of the Stack Overflow posting guidelines.

For background, here are some samples of previous close votes of mine.

Duplicate note: this is not a question about how to react to off-topic questions in general; it is a question about Stack Overflow scope.

tripleee
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