On Sat, Dec 17, 2016 at 03:20:17PM +0200, Yoav Nir wrote: > > It’s hard to move the pain in a predictable way. If I send you an > email message and it’s not delivered or gets mangled or goes in your > spam folder, who feels the pain? That depends on which of us needs > the email more. The primary problem is that DMARC is fundamentally flawed, and was not enacted using a standards process that respected all of the stakeholders. As a result, it fundamentally becomes a matter of power politics. If there are a bunch of people who need to participate in a particular mailing list --- say, IETF mailing list or the Linux Kernel development lists --- more than they need to stick with a particular mail provider, it becomes possible to say to them, "you want to participate in our community"? Change mail providers. In the cases where a mailing list community badly needs the Yahoo users, Yahoo can dictate to the mailing list --- change your mailing list software and inflict pain all off your mailing list users, or you don't get access to our e-mail user community. > The group you want to feel the pain are the administrators who add > DMARC records, but other than spamming them with error reports, > there’s not much we can do. I don’t think the administrators at > Yahoo care too much whether their users are able to use IETF mailing > lists or not. > > As a proxy we can “punish" those senders who have a DMARC record for their domain. > > If we do nothing, their messages sometimes get lost. They have real > problems participating effectively in the IETF unless they switch to > using gmail or hotmail accounts like many of us have already > done. But that gives us pain as well because we’re missing messages > as long as they keep using their own accounts. Yeah, it's the "sometimes mail gets lost" problem which is the main issue. So it might actually be better to have the mailing list software refuse to accept a mailing list posting from a domain with a DMARC record, and it can be bounced back to the sender immediately with a "sorry, try again using some e-mail address that does not have DMARC support". But again, doing this fundamentally is a game of power politics --- just as DMARC being inflicted on the entire e-mail ecosystem was a matter of power politics. Cheers, - Ted > If we apply the mitigations only to such accounts, we solve the > bounce issue, but then depending on the solutions we poison some of > the other participants’ email addresses, or we make the UI show > weird unhelpful things. Seems like everybody else gets the pain.