Scott Kitterman writes:

 > From: "$CUSTOMER_FRIENDLY_NAME" <[email protected]>
 > To: $DELIVERY_ADDRESS
 > Reply-To: "$CUSTOMER_FRIENDLY_NAME" <$CUSTOMER_ADDRESS>

This won't work for a lot of mailing lists, though, because Reply-To
is munged to point to the list, and it is frequently a requirement of
such lists that $CUSTOMER_ADDRESS *not* be in Reply-To.

And although it gets the mail past DMARC, ISTR that in many cases (eg,
invoicing services) the client (ie, the billing firm) wants its
address in From, so it flunks the user requirements here, too.

I suspect that if this becomes common, it will play havoc with
recipient contact lists, too.

 > but it works for DMARC:

Sure, but that's the tail wagging the dog.  The point of DMARC is so
that people can put their addresses in From and be believed, not that
there are kludges to get your content past DMARC.

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