Well, actually you could setup DNS SRV records pointing to a third party
server (like the MX record for mail).

So you can have a server example.org with a web server, a ftp server... And
xmpp accounts @example.org although the actual xmpp service is provided by
provider.net.

Also, there are servers that only provide MUC and have the user
registration disabled.

And a server can, through service discovery, list services hosted in other
machines/domains.
El 23/01/2014 11:33, "Evgeny Khramtsov" <xramt...@gmail.com> escribió:

> Thu, 23 Jan 2014 11:27:19 +0100
> Daniel Pocock <dan...@pocock.com.au> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > I'm just wondering about practical forwarding and/or redirection
> > options for people who want to offer some kind of XMPP service on
> > their domain but don't really want to run a full service themselves.
> >
> > For example, many free software projects (Debian, Fedora) offer their
> > developers mail forwarding (poc...@debian.org->dan...@pocock.com.au)
> > without having any mailboxes.  Is it feasible to construct similarly
> > low key solutions with XMPP?
> >
> >
>
> No :)
>

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