On Jul 27, 2006, at 12:19 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
wayne wrote:
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Paul Hoffman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

"I sign some mail" doesn't tell the recipient anything useful.

What am I missing?

It says that you should look at email without a signature as being "acceptable", unlike a "I sign all mail" which without a signature is quite questionable.

From what I can tell, "I sign some mail" tells the receiver that the signer wants to put up a policy statement, but that's about it. The one thing that's vaguely interesting about this is that we could do surveys of who's at least thinking about dkim.

The "I sign some mail" (an open-ended list) also indicates that when a signature is damaged by a mail-list for example, this source should be considered valid for their OA. An open-ended list also allows positive annotations, but with fewer delivery failures or support calls.

-Doug
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