On August 13, 2005 at 15:27, Keith Moore wrote: > If end-users today are accustomed to thinking the message was sent by > RFC2822.From, they will need to be educated, and they may also need > better MUAs that make the distinction clear. But I don't think most > end-users are this naive or incapable of understanding the difference. > Mailing lists, for example, do not follow this convention. Nor do > forwarded messages. Neither one of these seems to result in a great > deal of user confusion.
I believe most users believe the From indicates who authored the message, with the secondary implication that the identity in the rfc2822.from is also who sent it, and things like mailing lists are viewed as just part of the tranmission of the message to end recipients, with the ultimate sender denoted in the From. We must remember, the bulk of email users are not versed in the intricacies of email. For example, many do not know about the difference between envelope addresses and what they see in the To: field. Education is always nice, but I am not sure how effective it can be if it is the lone tool to solve problems. Spam could be stopped if people were educated enough to stop responding to it. --ewh _______________________________________________ ietf-dkim mailing list [email protected] http://mipassoc.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf-dkim
