Re: [mailop] message attachments, was Guide for setting up a mail server ?
It appears that Grant Taylor via mailop said: >I'd be worried that some (web) MUAs would deal with multipart/digest >worse than they deal with message/rfc822 contained in the former. >Especially with the comment that someone made about inline vs attachment >disposition of the message/rfc822 MIME parts. I found they dealt pretty badly with all of them. I use quaint old Alpine which deals with attached messages just fine, but then I am strange. R's, John ___ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop
Re: [mailop] message attachments, was Guide for setting up a mail server ?
On 7/14/23 9:22 PM, John Levine via mailop wrote: Well, sure. What do you think mailing list MIME digests are? I assume that you're referring to multipart/digest. The disadvantage is that a lot of mail systems, particularly popular webmail, deal poorly with embedded messages. Agreed. I'd be worried that some (web) MUAs would deal with multipart/digest worse than they deal with message/rfc822 contained in the former. Especially with the comment that someone made about inline vs attachment disposition of the message/rfc822 MIME parts. When the IETF was trying to figure out the least bad way to deal with DMARC list damage I mocked up some possibilities including a couple of ways to wrap messages as attachments. We found that unwrapping and replying to them worked poorly, so we decided on per-user From rewrites (my dmarc.fail hack) instead. Yep. Grant. . . . ___ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop
Re: [mailop] message attachments, was Guide for setting up a mail server ?
It appears that Hans-Martin Mosner via mailop said: >Has anyone on this list tried forwarding (e.g. for ex-employees) via >attachment? Well, sure. What do you think mailing list MIME digests are? The disadvantage is that a lot of mail systems, particularly popular webmail, deal poorly with embedded messages. When the IETF was trying to figure out the least bad way to deal with DMARC list damage I mocked up some possibilities including a couple of ways to wrap messages as attachments. We found that unwrapping and replying to them worked poorly, so we decided on per-user From rewrites (my dmarc.fail hack) instead. R's, John ___ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop