Signing That, nothing to add.

-----Original Message-----
From: dmarc <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Barry Leiba
Sent: Tuesday, June 27, 2023 4:24 PM
To: Alessandro Vesely <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [dmarc-ietf] easier DKIM, DMARC2 & SPF Dependency Removal

I don't understand how most of your message fits into this discussion:
you're comparing SPF's policy points with DMARC policy.  we're talking about 
SPF as an authentication mechanism together with DKIM (not
DMARC) as an authentication mechanism... and then using those authentication 
results in DMARC policy evaluation.

But here: I've said all this before in separate places, so I'll put it in one 
place, here, one more time:

Given that SPF and DKIM are both configured properly:
1. If SPF passes, DKIM will always pass.
2. If DKIM fails, SPF will always fail.
3. In some scenarios, DKIM will pass when SPF fails.

Therefore, when everything is configured properly, SPF adds no value beyond 
what DKIM does, and DKIM does add value beyond what SPF does.
That's why I am (and others are) arguing that we should remove SPF *from DMARC 
evaluation*.  There's no argument that for now, or some, SPF outside of DMARC 
still has value.

What others are arguing is that in the real world, things do get 
mis-configured, and if DKIM is misconfigured and fails when it shouldn't, SPF 
adds value by providing a working authentication.
(And, of course, similarly the other way around, plus DKIM covers some cases 
when messages are relayed or forwarded.)  That speaks for "SPF
*or* DKIM".

But "SPF *and* DKIM" -- requiring *both* to pass -- is technically unnecessary 
at best, because of (1) above: DKIM should always pass when SPF passes.  But 
where the harm comes is in cases of mis-configuration, because now if *either* 
of them is misconfigured, the whole thing fails -- neither of them serves as a 
backup for the other; instead, the misconfiguration of either one causes 
deliverability problems.  DMARC is damaged by requiring an authentication 
situation that is unnecessary when things are properly configured, and that is 
more fragile than what we've been using, more susceptible to configuration 
errors than we've seen before.

And I'm afraid that people will use it preferentially, *thinking* that it 
provides better "security" -- surely, double authentication is better than 
single, no?

No.

Barry

On Tue, Jun 27, 2023 at 6:36 AM Alessandro Vesely <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Mon 26/Jun/2023 20:13:53 +0200 Barry Leiba wrote:
> > I'm saying I don't want "and" to be an option, because I think it's 
> > damaging to DMARC.  There is no reason anyone should ever want to 
> > say that, and providing the option asks for misconfigurations 
> > because people think it's somehow "more secure".  It's not more 
> > secure.  It would be very bad for deliverability of legitimate mail 
> > and would provide no additional security.  It would be a terrible mistake.
>
>
> I've been sporting spf-all for years, and seldom experienced bounces, 
> mostly due to misconfigured secondary MXes.  Out of 39 domains whose 
> posts to this list in the past year are still in my inbox, 14 have 
> spf-all.  So, while I'm not the only one, not many published -all even 
> though it may seem to be somehow more secure.
>
> I think it can be worth to compare SPF and DMARC.  Another sender 
> policy a decade and an authentication method after.  What adoption, what hype.
>
> Both policies ask receivers to reject a domain identifier in some 
> cases.  RFC
> 7208 explicitly suggests to consider whitelisting (Appendix D).  DMARC 
> provides for overrides but is less clear about how to handle 
> exceptions.  After SPF broke forwarding, the reaction was split 
> between some changing identifier and turning to ~all; after DMARC 
> broke mailing lists, between changing identifier and not altering 
> messages.  In my limited experience, the ratio seems to be higher for DMARC 
> than SPF, but I may be wrong.
>
> In theory, domains that currently have a strict DMARC policy and 
> spf-all, 6 of the above, should have their messages blocked when 
> either method fails, up to changing identifiers.  Why would it be so 
> bad for deliverability to additionally require DMARC alignment, which 
> is the difference between that and the "and"?
>
> And, it seems to me that an ESP not having a bloated SPF record could 
> stop a good deal of DKIM replay by resorting to auth=dkim+spf.  
> Besides collateral deliverability problems, why wouldn't that work?
>
> Wht would "and" damage DMARC more than -all damaged SPF?
>
> I hope we can discuss detailed criticism rather than vague ostracism.
>
>
> Best
> Ale
> --
>
>
>
>
>

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