John Levine writes: > I have several users who want me to forward their mail to Gmail > addresses. I add ARC headers, I do not break DKIN signatures, and > nonetheless Gmail still rejects a lot of it. Google says they look > at ARC, but apparently only so much, since they still reject a lot > of the mail I try to forward.
What I tell to people complaining about that, is that they should use real mail service provider where they are a customer, not a company where they are the product that company is selling out. If you are not customer, the company does not have any incentivive to be nice for you, i.e., to receive your emails. For google it is always cheaper to just silently throw away your email than store it to some mailbox. In normal case this would cause lots of customer support calls, but google does not have customers, thus it does not have customer support, and other companies and organizations pay the cost for that lack of customer support. > Anything that depends on individual user setup just doesn't scale. Thats why we need mail user interfaces to include similar things that they have "mark this email as spam", or "this email is not spam" to include "this is from my normal indirect email flow, mark this domain xxx as trusted forwarder". -- [email protected] _______________________________________________ dmarc mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
