Right, maybe I’ve missed something - in my (albeit limited) experience, mail 
that gets forwarded a few times by various filters (most recent issue I’ve seen 
is someone trying to forward Rackspace -> Gmail -> ZenDesk, which, somewhere 
along the way didn’t make it), and without anything tying the sending domain to 
the sending IP, things look slighting more spammy to filters and you’re more 
likely to get dropped. Is there some other fix for cases like the above?

Thanks,
Matt

> On Jul 11, 2020, at 09:20, Laura Atkins <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>>>    The goal is to actually publish the private key, no need to wait for 
>>> someone to brute-force it :)
>>> 
>>> Are you sure you're not better using S/MIME or GPG to produce /signed/ 
>>> email payloads?
>> 
>> The goal isn't to sign emails, in fact ideally we wouldn't have to at all. 
>> The goal is only to get the deliveability
>> advantages of DKIM *without* signing (or at least without non-reputably 
>> signing) email.
> 
> The deliverability advantages of signing with DKIM are a clear domain to hand 
> the reputation on. There’s no inherent advantage to signing and in fact 
> there’s quite a bit of mail that delivers just fine and isn’t signed. 
> 
> laura 
> 
> -- 
> Having an Email Crisis?  We can help! 800 823-9674 
> 
> Laura Atkins
> Word to the Wise
> [email protected]
> (650) 437-0741                
> 
> Email Delivery Blog: https://wordtothewise.com/blog   
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