I have an automated system in place for our customers, partners, and friends domains to catch that and then I make them aware. There’s currently about 108 on my list that are broken.
I’m not going to put a spotlight on everyone, but here’s a list of .edu domains: ashland.edu dmu.edu sdstate.edu usd.edu If anyone has some good connections to those schools, please send a note of encouragement. Success rate is about 5 to 10%. If I get a response from someone in the first few days after my first note then it’s usually 80% chance it will be resolved in two weeks. There’s some who think that the problem is our spam filtering server and lot of confusion on who/where to send my note – I usually encourage their IT consultant/department or their email or DNS resource. Frank From: mailop <mailop-boun...@mailop.org> On Behalf Of Liam Fisher via mailop Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2020 9:05 AM To: mailop@mailop.org Subject: [mailop] SPF notification question Quick question to the hive mind about SPF. What do you usually do for domains that have broken SPF records? I mean the ones affecting your inbound to local delivery. Do you notify the sender and what's the usual process?
_______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop