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Re: Enough DMARC whinging

2014-04-30 01:20:55
IETF could recommend people using Yahoo or AOL wanting to be read should
resubscribe to IETF lists from another domain?

Andrew G. Malis wrote:
Philip,

Here are the effects that I see. I use this gmail account for my IETF
mailing lists. I am now consistently seeing email sent from Yahoo
users end up in my spam folder with the following embedded warning
message:

*Be careful with this message.* Our systems couldn't verify that this
message was really sent by yahoo.com <http://yahoo.com>. You might
want to avoid clicking links or replying with personal
information.  Learn more
<http://support.google.com/mail/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1366858&ctx=mail&authuser=1&expand=2>

The sender, of course, is completely unaware of what is happening on
the receiver's end, so they have no reason to want to change from
Yahoo to another domain for posting.

So this is imposing pain on the receiver, since I now have to
consistently check my spam folder for valid IETF email.

I see that you also use gmail, so you should start checking your spam
folder as well.

Cheers,
Andy


On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 3:54 PM, Phillip Hallam-Baker
<hallam(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com <mailto:hallam(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>> wrote:

    I am finding it rather hard to follow the DMARC discussion. Some folk
    have managed to convince me that they are upset but working out why
    would require rather a lot of spec crunching.

    My best theory so far is that DMARC is some sort of email policy
    statement and that either (1) some companies are now publishing a
    policy that states 'reject all mail that purports to come from this
    address that does not have authentication Y' or (2) some companies are
    now rejecting mail not in compliance with said policy or (3) both.

    There is a simple truth about DNS names: Whoever owns them makes the
    rules for their use [1]. If you don't like the rules for
    google.com <http://google.com>
    then choose another domain to post from.


    If people want email to work with mailing lists, then don't complain
    about reasonable choices people want to make. Work out a way to fix
    mailing lists so that they work properly.

    There is no reason we can't change the way From works. Or add new
    from headers.

    Are we engineers or curators of the past?


    [1] Thus be rather suspicious of folk who claim that we merely rent
    the use on terms of their choosing.

    --
    Website: http://hallambaker.com/



-- 
Christian de Larrinaga
FBCS, CITP, MCMA
-------------------------
@ FirstHand
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+44 7989 386778
cdel(_at_)firsthand(_dot_)net
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