On 9/9/14 4:39 AM, "Stephen J. Turnbull" <step...@xemacs.org> wrote:

>Kelley, John writes:
>
> > 1. Auto Forwards, principally where the email is munged in some way
> > causing DKIM to fail.
> > 2. Mailing lists; although the big ones seem to be rewriting the From
> > (thanks).
>
>From what I've seen on Mailman Project lists[1], your users may not feel
>the same way, though.  There have been complaints to list owners that
>they're getting singled out (a popular Mailman feature, for example,
>checks DMARC policy and munges From or wraps the message only if it's
>p=reject).
>
>Have you had any such feedback?

I have no such feedback, but it might not come to me.


>
> > 3. Groups (these might be considered a subset of mailing lists, but
> >    folks seem to think of them differently)
>
>What's a "group"?  Specifically, how do messages get submitted to
>groups and then injected into the mail system?  If there are multiple
>ways of submitting messages, does it matter which one is used?


We had a pow-wow a few days ago and this came up.  I believe that for
DMARC purposes, we can refer to it as a mailing-list, but it seems as if
people think of them differently.  I believe that folks use the term group
to identify things they "belong" to (neighborhood association, swimming
pool) and the term list to identify things they subscribe to.  I broke it
apart simply because that is the way it was brought up to me.  The inner
workings are, I am sure, very similar to a mailing list.  Perhaps a
moderated mailing list.


John Kelley



>
>
>Footnotes: 
>[1]  Can't speak from personal experience, all my "p=reject"
>subscribers said "thanks for the heads-up" and changed posting
>address.
>

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