I was told by some Paypal Facebook person that this issue should be
completely resolved by the end of this month.
I reported it in sometime in December.

Best regards
Henrik Schack


On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 4:04 PM, Franck Martin <[email protected]> wrote:

>  228.84.0.173.in-addr.arpa. 300 IN PTR mx3.slc.paypal.com
>
>  The IP shows it is coming from paypal servers, so yes they spoofed you.
> It is likely to be a known issue at paypal. I would not worry too much
> about it, but report it to paypal customer support to indicate you are not
> receiving their emails because they tried to spoof you.
>
>
>  On Feb 27, 2013, at 3:43 AM, Lucian Holland <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>  Hi,
>
>  Apologies if this is the wrong forum, or I'm being particularly clueless
> about his, but I've recently implemented DMARC for my domain
> symposion.co.uk, and was surprised by a report I just received. I wanted
> to check if this was a known phenomenon, a misunderstanding on my part, or
> some genuine (and rather worrying) abuse.
>
>  The report is included at the bottom of this message. If I'm
> understanding correctly, this is yahoo telling me that it has rejected a
> message according to my dmarc configuration. In particular, the message
> came was sent from a mail server with ip 173.0.84.228, and it failed
> because the message claimed in the headers to be from symposion.co.uk but
> in fact wasn't. What's odd is that the message passes both dkim and spf as
> paypal.com, and the mail server address is indeed mx3.slc.paypal.com . So
> it looks like PayPal is trying to spoof me! Is this a known issue with some
> elements of Paypal's systems vs DMARC, a sign of something more sinister,
> or just me misunderstanding?
>
>  Many thanks,
>
>  Lucian
>
>
>
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