In article <CAMaMmn=g9FA2sYFzcnLgGCEfpnWFVb3sOwyPMr_g=qhp9az...@mail.gmail.com> you write: >For any set of aliases that are manually configured, publishing a key, or >CNAME for each of those is of the same order of complexity as establishing >the alias itself.
For over a decade, I've been doing the common trick of inventing a new address each time I sign up for something. Correct me if I'm wrong, but you appear to be saying that now, I have to stop, go to some sort of DNS provisioning system, tell it about the name I'm about to invent, publish the new record, and wait for it to propagate before I can go back to the web page where I'm about to use the name. Also, I have no idea what all of the addresses are that I've made up over the years, many of which still get mail from whoever I gave them to. It appears I'm out of luck there. >Unless your user agent generates a fuzzy match variant of your from: >address outbound with each email, I am not sure that the scaling problem is. There are plenty of mail systems that do that. Perhaps it would be helpful to learn more about the way that modern mail systems work. R's, John _______________________________________________ dane mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dane
