Hi,
On 11/3/06, David Welton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There was some discussion a long long time ago about this and how
> some valid email addresses don't have a dot in them. I don't know how
> that could be except perhaps on an internal network or something.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Yup, that's an example. The general issue is in RFC2821, section
2.3.10. Only the destination host should attempt to parse, verify, or
manipulate the string after the @. Most of the time this would only
be useful on an internal network where you create aliases and/or run
your own mailing lists inside the network...
Yoav