TL;DR

Status colors across Superkabe use a consistent palette: green = healthy/active, amber = warning/drifting, red = paused/blocked, blue = in-progress (warmup/recovery), gray = completed/inactive. Color is paired with an explicit status label — never relied on alone.

What Do Status Colors Mean?

A visual guide to the health indicators across your entire infrastructure

Quick Answer

Superkabe uses a consistent color system across all entities: Green = healthy and active, Yellow/Amber = warning, needs attention, Red = paused or critical, Gray = inactive or unknown.

Mailbox Status Colors

ColorStatusMeaningAction
HealthyMailbox is active, connected, and sending normally. Bounce rate is within safe limits.None needed
WarningBounce rate is elevated or approaching threshold. SMTP/IMAP connection may be intermittent.Monitor closely. Check DNS and connection status.
PausedSuperkabe has auto-paused this mailbox due to high bounce rate, connection failure, or blacklisting. No emails are being sent.Review the healing pipeline. The auto-healing system will attempt recovery automatically.
InactiveMailbox exists in the sending platform but is not currently assigned to any active campaign.Assign to a campaign or remove if unused.

Domain Status Colors

ColorStatusMeaning
HealthyDNS records valid, not blacklisted, bounce rate under threshold.
WarningDNS degradation detected, minor blacklist hit, or bounce rate trending up.
CriticalMajor blacklist (Spamhaus, Barracuda), SPF/DKIM/DMARC failing, or domain burned. All mailboxes on this domain are paused.

Lead Health Colors

ColorClassificationWhat Happens
GREENLead passes all checks. Routed to campaign and pushed to sending platform.
YELLOWLead has minor risk factors (catch-all domain, low confidence score). Routed but flagged for monitoring.
REDLead blocked by execution gate. Invalid email, disposable address, or health score too low. Never reaches the sending platform.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are colors accessibility-safe?

+

Yes. All status indicators pair color with either a label or icon, meeting WCAG AA contrast requirements and remaining distinguishable in deuteranopic / protanopic views.