In article <[email protected]> you write: >someone from amazon Germany may be interested. >Again: I guess it's a legit message from amazon, otherwise let me know ...
It looks fine. How does your code pass the DKIM validation results to the DMARC code? >Authentication-Results: idvmailin13.datevnet.de; > dkim=pass (1024-bit key; unprotected) header.d=amazonses.com >[email protected] header.b=IGahw/4Y >Authentication-Results: idvmailin13.datevnet.de; > spf=pass >smtp.mailfrom=<201506160039204c745a2b7a8d4cd89e6e312cb96417e9-cuo19kbgo1...@bounces.amazon.com> >smtp.helo=a0-79.smtp-out.eu-west-1.amazonses.com I have never seen an A-R implementation that added multiple headers. Everyone else puts all the results in one header, separated by semicolons. If your code reads the A-R header, that's likely the problem, it only expects one A-R header so it only looks at the first one, which in this case happens not to include a result that makes DMARC happy. 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)
