On Fri, Jan 27, 2017, at 04:23, Jim Popovitch via dmarc-discuss wrote: > On Thu, Jan 26, 2017 at 11:13 PM, John Levine via dmarc-discuss > <dmarc-discuss@dmarc.org> wrote: > > I concur with Roland. Looking at my failure reports, I see some from > > Hotmail and Linkedin and beyond that a few from Chinese and Russian > > ISPs generally reporting random spam that happened to randomly fake my > > domain. > > But what can you do about it? What is the "value" of having that > information, and what is the "cost" of capturing it?
To me, the value of these reports is pre-deployment, by carefully reviewing the reports you can identify any legitimate sources of mail which are not properly signed and aligned. As a company that currently has no employees beyond myself and only a few hundred clients, I was able to find a couple legitimate sources of mail coming from my own domain that had been previously overlooked. _______________________________________________ dmarc-discuss mailing list dmarc-discuss@dmarc.org http://www.dmarc.org/mailman/listinfo/dmarc-discuss NOTE: Participating in this list means you agree to the DMARC Note Well terms (http://www.dmarc.org/note_well.html)