Would using your own domain name suffer from the reputation issue that would mean that you can’t really send very much of anything, since it would be eaten by the spam filtering?
No, reputation is mainly only tied to the IP address of the sending server. As long as a message is signed correctly and has proper SPF and DKIM entries in DNS, it shouldn’t affect spam detection.
I can’t say it won’t, because that’s really up to the receiving SMTP server, but industry practice is generally that the domain name is a very low value signal, compared to sending IP.
Brand new domains, as long as they’re being sent from an IP address with a good reputation, should have no issues.
Would using your own domain name suffer from the reputation issue that would mean that you can’t really send very much of anything, since it would be eaten by the spam filtering?
No, reputation is mainly only tied to the IP address of the sending server. As long as a message is signed correctly and has proper SPF and DKIM entries in DNS, it shouldn’t affect spam detection.
I can’t say it won’t, because that’s really up to the receiving SMTP server, but industry practice is generally that the domain name is a very low value signal, compared to sending IP.
Brand new domains, as long as they’re being sent from an IP address with a good reputation, should have no issues.