Which I can understand, I obviously might not like it as a legitimate user
of the TLD, but sometimes a measure like that could be the most effective
mitigation (especially for smaller scale ops). What I did have a problem
with was both the fact that the message was generic ("sender rejected"),
which isn't very helpful if I wasn't a mail admin, and that no one seemed
willing to talk to me about it (emails to contact addresses were not
allowed from my domain either, and emailing from other addresses went
unanswered).It's not a huge issue as I just use one of my other addresses to forward things to my family member (and we're trying to move him away from that address anyway), but the fact that as a customer, I can't even forward emails to myself, is kinda frustrating. On Wed, Mar 22, 2023 at 11:58 AM John Levine via mailop <[email protected]> wrote: > It appears that fh--- via mailop <[email protected]> said: > >On 2023-03-22 12:19, Scott Undercofler wrote: > >> Like .tk and .ml that are free? > >> > > > >He means the .pw TLD he was using. > > Oh, no wonder. I block it too. > > R's, > John > _______________________________________________ > mailop mailing list > [email protected] > https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop >
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