Re: What I've been wondering about the DMARC problem

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On 17/04/2014 22:03, Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
> On 16 Apr 2014, at 21:36, Brian E Carpenter <brian.e.carpenter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> On 16/04/2014 18:58, Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
>>> On 15 Apr 2014, at 21:38, Brian E Carpenter <brian.e.carpenter@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>> The mailman fix is worse than the disease. I think the .INVALID fix is
>>>> much better, because Reply-all will still work.
>>> Reply-all should still work with the Mailman fix; 
>> It doesn't work *properly*. Firstly, this message wouldn't be sent
>> to you with CC to the list, which is the correct semantic.
>> If you weren't a subscriber, you would never see it. Secondly,
> 
> Sorry, but I appear to be confused.
> 
> The Reply-To: field is adjusted to be the author's address, 

Oh, OK. Most UAs will probably do what you describe, but I think
there are exceptions. However, if I want to reply to the author
alone, it's now the simple Reply that will fail me, because it
will reply to the list. And in my mail folders, messages will
all appear to come from the list; if I want to find the message
that Sabahattin sent me two years ago, I can't, because my UA
doesn't allow for searching on the Reply-To field.

It's still got very poor semantics.

    Brian

> on a discussion list like this where replies go back to the authors.  Just in case we're talking across purposes somehow and to avoid all doubt, the fix we are talking about is described here:
> http://www.dmarc.org/supplemental/mailman-project-mlm-dmarc-reqs.html
> 
> Unless your MUA is doing something very unusual, and some do, then pressing "Reply all" should produce a message addressed to me, with a CC that contains the remainder of the recipient addresses.  The From: is completely irrelevant.
> 
> I'm just waiting to be told that I've missed the obvious. :)
> 
> Now, FWIW, a better way is as has been suggested here, namely to synthesise addresses for each subscriber.  That's how I'd do it: every mailing list post has its From: rewritten, like:
> ietf-resend+brian.e.carpenter=gmail.com@xxxxxxxx
> 
> That address remails to you, first checking that a subscriber of the list is recognised.  In the process, it performs the same transformation on the From: field of the message, so as to pass SPF alignment.  It is hoped that your interlocutor happens to be on the list, also, or that you are still on the list when he is trying to contact you.
> 
>> the first line above would read:
>>
>> On 16/04/2014 18:58, IETF discussion list wrote:
>>
>> which is untrue.
> 
> It isn't necessary to change the personal name.  Some MUAs may very cleverly add one in the absence of one, or store it in an address book, though, incorrectly.  With the resend method above this issue is less problematic; furthermore the list software can add "(via listname)" to make the distinction less confusing.
> 
> No, none of these suggestions are perfect.  I'm not looking for a perfect solution though, I'm looking for one that works, for now.  Throwing people off my lists *is not* an option.
> 
> Cheers,
> Sabahattin
> 
> 





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