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Mij stipescams. Wy sille jo nea freegje in telefoannûmer te beljen, der in sms nei ta te stjoeren of persoanlike gegevens te dielen. Meld fertochte aktiviteit mei de opsje ‘Misbrûk melde’.

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Dizze konversaasje is argivearre. Stel in nije fraach as jo help nedich hawwe.

Content-Type: multipart/mixed

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When redirecting (not forwarding) a message from the Zimbra server, I receive it without an attachment. I am attaching a screenshot of the message header. I don't know what could be the reason. Please help.

When redirecting (not forwarding) a message from the Zimbra server, I receive it without an attachment. I am attaching a screenshot of the message header. I don't know what could be the reason. Please help.
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Zimbra or the original sender is sending malformed mail.

The transfer type is defined as application/octet-stream in the image. According to the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), the group responsible for registering media types that is defined as follows;

(RFC 2045 and 2046 published November 1996, subtype last updated April November 1996)
The "octet-stream" subtype is used to indicate that a body contains
arbitrary binary data.  The set of currently defined parameters is:
 (1)   TYPE -- the general type or category of binary data.
      This is intended as information for the human recipient
      rather than for any automatic processing.
 (2)   PADDING -- the number of bits of padding that were
      appended to the bit-stream comprising the actual
      contents to produce the enclosed 8bit byte-oriented
      data.  This is useful for enclosing a bit-stream in a
      body when the total number of bits is not a multiple of
      8.
Both of these parameters are optional.
An additional parameter, "CONVERSIONS", was defined in RFC 1341 but
has since been removed.  RFC 1341 also defined the use of a "NAME"
parameter which gave a suggested file name to be used if the data
were to be written to a file.  This has been deprecated in
anticipation of a separate Content-Disposition header field, to be
defined in a subsequent RFC.
The recommended action for an implementation that receives an
"application/octet-stream" entity is to simply offer to put the data
in a file, with any Content-Transfer-Encoding undone, or perhaps to
use it as input to a user-specified process.
To reduce the danger of transmitting rogue programs, it is strongly
recommended that implementations NOT implement a path-search
mechanism whereby an arbitrary program named in the Content-Type
parameter (e.g., an "interpreter=" parameter) is found and executed
using the message body as input.

See https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/application/octet-stream

A PDF file which this image claims the content based on the file name (something that has no relevance in this setting except to suggest a default when saving the file, it should be transmitted as application/pdf https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/application/pdf

I would expect the arbitrary binary date to not be forwarded at all beyond the initial receipt. It is an elevated risk of containing a virus of some sort as the file name suggested and content type are unrelated to one another.