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Re: What I've been wondering about the DMARC problem

2014-04-15 11:47:32
They're forcing adoption -- while folks have not been addressing this piece
of the inter-governmental frame.  :-)


On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 12:35 PM, Miles Fidelman 
<mfidelman(_at_)meetinghouse(_dot_)net
wrote:

Dave Crocker wrote:

On 4/14/2014 6:45 PM, Brian E Carpenter wrote:

I thought that standard operating procedure in the IT industry
was: if you roll something out and it causes serious breakage to
some of your users, you roll it back as soon as possible.

Why hasn't Yahoo rolled back its 'reject' policy by now?



As the most-recent public statement from Yahoo, this might have some
tidbits in it that are relevant to your question:



http://yahoo.tumblr.com/post/82426971544/an-update-on-our-
dmarc-policy-to-protect-our-users

 You mean the part where they say:
"We know there are about 30,000 affected email sending services, but we
also know that the change needed to support our new DMARC policy is
important and not terribly  difficult to implement. We have detailed the
changes we are requiring here <http://yahoomail.tumblr.com/
post/82426900353/yahoo-dmarc-policy-change-what-should-senders-do>."

I.e., 'not our problem'

Miles Fidelman


--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.   .... Yogi Berra


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