>> If Paypal says to reject, I'm inclined to do it.  If it's Linkedin,
>> I'm not.
>
>Both LinkedIn and PayPal are doing incredible work to make email more
>resilient to fraud, and they both encounter similar issues.

To some degree, although I see plenty of spam from Linkedin and no
spam whatsoever from Paypal.

If you blindly followed Linkedin's p=reject advice, you'd find
yourself bounced off this list.  Paypal realized that and fixed it,
Linkedin knows about if and chooses not to fix it. So nobody sensible
trusts Linkedin's advice unless they have elaborate meta-advice about
when DMARC advice is credible and when it isn't.

R's,
John
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