A domain is a public IP Class or Address assigned by a registrar to an individual or company. Sending domain is the IP Class or Address that sent the message. Receiving domain is the IP Class or Address that is considering accepting the message. Very straight forward as I can receive a message without the intervention of a mail system. We are discussing how to assure mail is being tagged by the sending domain to clearly identify who is responsible for sending the message. Mail Systems are not really part of the discussion at any point. This is transportation identification. Lets leave the wording as is. thanks, Bill Oxley
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Peter Koch Sent: Sat 11/5/2005 6:38 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [ietf-dkim] DKIM proposed charter tweak On Wed, Nov 02, 2005 at 10:48:00AM -0800, william(at)elan.net wrote: > >While the techniques specified by the DKIM working group will not > >prevent fraud or spam, they will provide a tool for defense against > >them by assisting receiving domains to detect spoofing of known domains. > > s/receiving domains/mail systems/ seconded and extended: the term "domain" has been used with fuzzy meaning in various anti-spam proposals in the past. Since DNS in part of the solution it should be made clear what "known domains" mean, i.e. whether "domains" is meant to be "domain names" or not and if so, what domain names. -Peter _______________________________________________ ietf-dkim mailing list http://dkim.org _______________________________________________ ietf-dkim mailing list http://dkim.org
