>As I understand it, and In my experience, p=reject on DKIM fail would cause a >mail >delivery failure by google's servers. The fact that it ends up in your spam >folder >rather than outright failure indicates to me that something other than >p=reject is >responsible.
Assuming you mean DMARC fail, that's what I thought, and in early April I was seeing rejections of yahoo.com mail from Gmail with DMARC explanations in the rejection text. But now I've gotten notes from Gmail users who say that list mail from Yahoo users is showing up in their spam folder. When we look at the A-R headers, it still shows the p=reject from Yahoo. Evidently someone or something at Google has figured out that it is not in their interest to treat Yahoo's DMARC policy advice too seriously. Perhaps if you click "not spam" enough, that'll train it to ignore the advice completely. R's, John _______________________________________________ dmarc-discuss mailing list [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)
