Sure there is. There is an unwritten if condition for it to be incorrect or correct. Add the condition and then there is "nothing to fix" further. It could be as simply as adding:
The following assumes you already have a zone file for _domainkey.<domain> The thing is WINDOWS DNS admins are going to see ZONE FILES with records brisbane._domainkey so the example for them will be: brisbane._domainkey TXT ("v=DKIM1; p=".....") note there is no IN word. John R. Levine wrote: > Agree with Murray, there's nothing to fix here. > > On Thu, 14 Apr 2011, Murray S. Kucherawy wrote: > >>> -----Original Message----- >>> >>> Text change to consider: >>> >>> This public-key data (without the BEGIN and END tags) is placed in >>> the DNS as a TXT record subdomain using the selector (i.e. brisbane) >>> plus "._domainkey" like so: >>> >>> brisbane._domainkey IN TXT ("v=DKIM1; p=".....") >> >> I don't think this clarifies anything in particular. If the zone file >> is for a domain itself, this makes sense, but the text as-is is just fine >> if the zone file is for _domainkey.<domain>. I've seen it done >> (and have done it) using both designs, so both are equally correct. -- Hector Santos, CTO http://www.santronics.com http://santronics.blogspot.com _______________________________________________ NOTE WELL: This list operates according to http://mipassoc.org/dkim/ietf-list-rules.html