Steve Litt <[email protected]> wrote:

> The biggest accomplishment of this DMARC/DKIM thing was to make email
> such a mess that it sent even more of the dummy dwobes to Facebook, a
> private club having a monopoly over communication. What could POSSIBLY
> go wrong?

I don’t think it has. From past experience, it’s taught many people that “the 
only email you should use is gmail (or one of a handful of others)” because of 
the things they broke (deliberately).

At my last job, we ran a mail server for our clients. When I started there it 
was (IIRC) iMail ruling on Win NT and it got hacked regularly. I got asked if I 
could knock something up - which I did, a “temporary” setup with linux, 
Postfix, Postfixadmin, Amavis, and a few more bits. It was temporary for quite 
a long time, and needless to say, quite reliable in spite of me only having 
“hand me down” hardware to run my servers on - I was putting hardware into 
service that was (as my manager described it) 9 year past it’s swap out date ! 
But I digress.
After a good few years, I did a refresh and built a clustered system with 
before-acceptance mail scanning - something the big guys don’t seem to be able 
to manage.

As a policy, we’d setup clients with their own email to match their websites - 
so (e.g.) bloggscoffeeshop.co.uk would have (e.g.) [email protected] 
for email. I’ve always thought it looks just plain naff when you see a custom 
website with a nice domain name - and a generic email like (e.g.) 
[email protected].
But, many clients just refused to have two email accounts on their computer 
even though we’d offer to set it up for them. So many were simple redirects so 
that mail to [email protected] just got redirected to 
[email protected]. Which worked fine until Google, MS, and Yahoo between 
them broke it and we had to explain to our clients that Google, MS, Yahoo, et 
al had broken their email setup deliberately.
But still, many refused to simply setup their nice email address as a second 
account in their client - I’ve noticed that even MS have relented and the 
built-in client in Win 10 now allows this, the built-in piece of rubbish in Win 
8 didn’t. So many simply changed the address on their website to be their ISP 
provided email.

And as far as the clients were concerned, the problem was our broken mail 
service - hence they need to use a “proper” one.

I did look into applying SRS, but with the combination of tools I was using, 
that broke one of our key anti-spam measures.

<rant>

So as far as I’m concerned, the fact that they broke stuff was quite 
deliberate. The likes of Google, MS, Yahoo, etc would far rather people use 
their systems (so they can monetise their emails) than have it easy for smaller 
outfits to run fully functional emails systems. And between them they had/have 
enough of the market to simply declare something broken, change it, and force 
the rest of the world to change to suit them.

</rant>

Simon
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