1. Do nothing and let domains that publish p=reject live with the consequences
2. Don't permit domains with p=reject onto mailing lists
3. Mailing lists should reformat the message to prevent DMARC failures
4. Email receivers should be selective about how they enforce p=reject - send it to Junk or even skip enforcing it from known good emailing lists
5. Extend DMARC so that it supports mailing lists
6. Something else?

These each have their pros and cons but it seems to me that working to support 
p=reject with mailing lists is a net benefit to everyone.

Oh, sure. I'm a fan of #4, a DMARC bypass whitelist supported by the same companies that want the world to do DMARC.

R's,
John
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