Might be important to mention that services such as exchange doesn’t support 
subaddressing, so it’s a bit harder there :)

With that said, I’d love [nginx] in the header, regardless if it breaks DKIM or 
similar, I have mailing lists whitelisted anyway for that exact reason, because 
there’s already plenty of lists that break DKIM or SPF for that matter.

In my case, I don’t filter on mailing lists and put them in specific 
directories, they all end up in my inbox, and I click through them, if the 
subject interests me - and I see the email of the list, and know which list 
it’s from.

Additionally, I know most common names that post on the mailing list, so it’s 
easy to see which list it comes from ^_^

Get Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef>

________________________________
From: 20306775700n behalf of
Sent: Monday, October 15, 2018 3:32 PM
To: nginx@nginx.org; Ralph Seichter
Subject: Re: Please DO NOT add [nginx] to subject


why not accept the advice you have been offered?

I read up on email extension on 
Gizmodo<https://gizmodo.com/how-to-use-the-infinite-number-of-email-addresses-gmail-1609458192>
 and Wikipedia<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_address> and I'm very 
familiar with filtering and labeling (all list based mails are labeled 
automatically) but I still believe that a adding [nginx] would make the 
situation more comfortable.

You have no case

My case is that when I open my email application on a phone or desktop 
occasionally throughout the day I want to see what I've got today at a glance 
without the need clicking / tabbing into sub folders. I open the app see what I 
came in and decide if it is important or can it be done later. In order to make 
this decision quicker a label in the subject would improve it enormously as you 
focus only on the subject during such actions.


Anyone else what to share her/his thoughts bedsides me and Ralph?


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_address#Subaddressing

On 15.10.2018 15:16, Ralph Seichter wrote:

On 15.10.18 14:59, Stefan Müller wrote:



but is seems others do or at least agree with me


So what if "others" agree with you? People agree with me as well, check
existing discussions about this issue.

If you challenge conventions that have been around for good reason, for
longer than some mailing list subscribers lived on this fair planet, you
better make a damn good case of it, based on evidence and not on your
limited personal experience in this particular matter (which is not
something to be ashamed of, just a learning opportunity). You have no
case, so why not accept the advice you have been offered?

-Ralph
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