Steve AOL follows the report tag requirement strictly. Do you have a _report record for the domain where you intend reports to be delivered?
If not add a Eg. To receive reports for the domain returnpath.com<http://returnpath.com> at an address in the domain auth.returnpath.net<http://auth.returnpath.net> you need the following TXT record in DNS. rpco-gcolbu1401:~ gcolburn$ dig +short TXT returnpath.com<http://returnpath.com>._report._dmarc.auth.returnpath.net<http://dmarc.auth.returnpath.net> "v=DMARC1" Hope this helps! Sincerely, Greg Colburn On Jan 9, 2014, at 2:08 PM, Steve Maggioncalda <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Thought I might put this to the group in hopes there is some insight into my issue. I am currently getting aggregate reports from Yahoo, Gmail, and Hotmail. I am not receiving any from AOL. Based on everything I've read at AOL, I am not seeing why I wouldn't get reports (I certainly may have missed something!) Also, Yahoo, Gmail, and Hotmail have properly bounced failed DKIM/SPF messages (based on my reject dmarc) but AOL doesn't. Any ideas? Thank you! Steve _______________________________________________ dmarc-discuss mailing list [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> http://www.dmarc.org/mailman/listinfo/dmarc-discuss NOTE: Participating in this list means you agree to the DMARC Note Well terms (http://www.dmarc.org/note_well.html)
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