
Stephen J. Turnbull wrote:
Mark Sapiro writes:
Then I read further and found "To participate in the program, senders must sign their outbound emails with DomainKeys (DKIM is not currently supported)."
This is the second time in recent weeks that some large mail service has used it's 600 lb. gorilla status to try to coerce me into something, and I don't like it.
C'mon, Mark, you know that the only problem here is that there's no accepted standard; they have to authenticate "you" somehow (do you really want me to be able to spoof you and get information about your mail to Yahoo customers?), and the right "you" to authenticate is the apparent source of allegedly objectionable mail. So it's going to be SPF or DomainKeys or something like that.
That's not what I understood it to say. I understand they need to authenticate me somehow as the person authorized to receive reports about my mail to yahoo.com recipients, but I thought it said that in order for me to participate in the feedback program at all, my mail to yahoo.com recipients had to be signed with DomainKeys.
-- Mark Sapiro <mark@msapiro.net> The highway is for gamblers, San Francisco Bay Area, California better use your sense - B. Dylan