>Mike Korizek writes: >>If courier receives an email with plain/text and HTML parts there >>happens a re-writing of the MIME boundaries. > >Not always. > >>If the email is digitally signed first, the verification fails due >>to this re-writing.
On 26.02.12 08:10, Sam Varshavchik wrote: >Define "digitally signed". Courier knows about multipart/signed MIME >content, and will not modify it during rewriting, if any. I guess he means DKIM-signed, which was already reported to break the DKIM signatures. However DKIM seems to be kind of broken, because after (sometimes necessary) recoding it gets broken. DKIM apparently should apply to normalized text and should be immune against such changes. -- Matus UHLAR - fantomas, uh...@fantomas.sk ; http://www.fantomas.sk/ Warning: I wish NOT to receive e-mail advertising to this address. Varovanie: na tuto adresu chcem NEDOSTAVAT akukolvek reklamnu postu. I feel like I'm diagonally parked in a parallel universe. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Try before you buy = See our experts in action! The most comprehensive online learning library for Microsoft developers is just $99.99! Visual Studio, SharePoint, SQL - plus HTML5, CSS3, MVC3, Metro Style Apps, more. Free future releases when you subscribe now! http://p.sf.net/sfu/learndevnow-dev2 _______________________________________________ courier-users mailing list courier-users@lists.sourceforge.net Unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/courier-users