On 29 Dec 2020, at 12:59, John Levine wrote:

In article <14d833ce-0ae0-f818-fd4f-95769266a...@mtcc.com> you write:

On 12/29/20 12:10 PM, John Levine wrote:
A lot of tiny non-profits like Girl Scout troops use email addresses
at webmail providers and send their announcements through ESPs like
Constant Contact and Mailchimp.  This is yet another situation where
DMARC can't describe an entirely normal mail setup.

Constant Contact apparently got Yahoo to give them a signing key,
at least temporarily, but that doesn't scale.

What gmail does for gsuite is generates (or not, who knows) a key and
gives you the selector to add to your dns. I don't see why that doesn't
scale for all situations.

To point out the obvious, because they use a single address at
yahoo.com or gmail.com or hotmail.com, not a private domain. These are
tiny organizations that don't have a lot of computer expertise nor a
lot of need for it.

But these Girl Scout troops are going to publish a DMARC policy despite their lack of expertise?

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