I thought that to get the google FBL you have to have a dual DKIM signature. One that signifies your client, and another that signifies the ESP sending the mail. This is how Gmail knows how to parse abuse results.
I believe there are other ISPs that ask you to utilize a dual DKIM signature if you want to receive their FBLs. Ryan On Fri, May 20, 2016 at 3:17 PM, Brandon Long via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> wrote: > Well, the first 5, for now. We can always raise that, but haven't seen a > need yet. > > Brandon > On May 20, 2016 1:54 PM, "Michael Rathbun" <m...@honet.com> wrote: > >> On Fri, 20 May 2016 16:36:48 -0400, Jim Popovitch <jim...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >> >> >> Anyone flagging multiple signatures as problematic is probably >> clueless. >> > >> > >> >It's not problematic, but since only 1 signature at a time can be >> >validated any remaining sigs become basically untrusted ascii data. >> >> Gmail definitely evaluates all the signatures. >> >> mdr >> -- >> There's a funny thing that happens when you know the correct >> answer. It throws you when you get a different answer that >> is not wrong. -- Dr Bowman (Freefall) >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> mailop mailing list >> mailop@mailop.org >> https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop >> > > _______________________________________________ > mailop mailing list > mailop@mailop.org > https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop > >
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