Not old enough to have had an Executive Secretary processing your incoming 
snail-mail before it gets to you?

The "envelope" in which a letter arrived is just as important as the letter 
itself and contains valuable information that is duplicated in e-mail -- the 
postmark (received headers), the return address (mail from); and, the delivery 
address (mail to).

It was an offense to discard the envelope in which correspondence arrived since 
it is used to determine the validity of the snail mail.

Current e-mail clients are comparable to having a secretary that throws out the 
envelope and snips off most of the inside addressing information and delivers 
only the heavily redacted letter so that no determination of its validity is 
possible.

---
The fact that there's a Highway to Hell but only a Stairway to Heaven says a 
lot about anticipated traffic volume.


>-----Original Message-----
>From: NANOG [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Levine
>Sent: Wednesday, 29 November, 2017 14:28
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: Incoming SMTP in the year 2017 and absence of DKIM
>
>In article <[email protected]> you write:
>>As I see it, the problem isn't with DKIM, it's with the
>>implementation of DMARC and other such filters.  Almost all
>>of them TEST THE WRONG FROM ADDRESS.  They compare the Author's
>>address (the header From: line) instead of the Sender's address,
>
>Sigh.  I have my differences with the people who designed DMARC but
>they are not stupid and they really do understand the relevant RFCs.
>Some of them even wrote some of those RFCs.
>
>The reason they look at the From: line is that's the one recipients
>see.  The Sender: header was a nice idea but in practice, it's not
>useful.
>
>R's,
>John



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