Without diving too deep into this can of worms I'd like to point out that rejecting mail due to SPF fails is a whole different ball-game-of- wax than accepting mail due to an SPF pass -- the limitations related to forwarding are well known, but orthogonal to whitelisting, which is what this thread was originally about... A domain whitelist (reputation) is useful whether the (authentication/authorization) mechanism is SPF or DKIM or PTR.

On Jul 12, 2007, at 11:48 PM, "John D. Hardin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Thu, 12 Jul 2007, Marc Perkel wrote:

I'm just tired of having to deal with the bad side effects of SPF
and expainging to people that the can't use my spam filtering
unless they turn SPF off.

What's wrong with that?

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