Yea, nobody responds to messages sent to icloudad...@apple.com That's the problem with services that ask you to send inquiries to an email address. That email address probably gets a ton of spam itself, so the person that's supposed to be responding to those inquiries either ignores the email or trashes the email thinking it is spam.
A better solution is to have a web form that asks for particular information so that the data can be properly funneled into whoever or whatever department needs to address those issues. But... there's also the case that the entity (Apple/iCloud in this instance) doesn't really have any motivation to respond or resolve any issues that are brought to their attention. "Your server can't send email to our users? Oh No! ... How does that affect us financially?" If enough recipients stop using their entity given email address (i.e. their @ icloud.com email address) then that may affect change on the entity's part. But good luck getting the general population to believe that. I don't know what your business's footprint is, but I would practically guarantee that it's smaller than Apple. The general public will believe that Apple can do no wrong, therefore YOU must be in the wrong. On Thu, Sep 26, 2024 at 1:54 AM Bjoern Franke via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> wrote: > Am 26.09.24 um 04:19 schrieb Francisco via mailop: > > Thanks. > > > > We did that, but its radio silence since the 12th :( > > > > > > What error message did you get? At $dayjob I got a "blocked by local > policy" for a domain from icloud and the DKIM entry was broken which > resulted in a DMARC permerror for the domain. > > Regards > Bjoern > _______________________________________________ > mailop mailing list > mailop@mailop.org > https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop >
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