On 13 Jul 2017, at 15:05, Dominic Raferd <domi...@timedicer.co.uk> wrote: > On 13 July 2017 at 21:06, @lbutlr <krem...@kreme.com> wrote: > > I forward mail to a gmail user, but there are a lot of bounces from gmail. I > don't honestly care about the ones that google says are spam, but recently > I'm also getting DMARC failures on Facebook mails. > > Again, not critical, but a bit annoying. > > The only thing that I can think to do is disable the forwarding and tell the > user to grab mail via POP3, but that means enabling POP3 which I'd rather not > do. Gmail does not, IFAIK, allow you to combine your mail with another IMAP > account. > > Any other ideas? > > If you use openDMARC on your own server then rejections by an onward > mailserver (e.g. Gmail) on the grounds of DMARC failure should only occur > when the sender has p=reject DMARC policy and is relying on SPF without DKIM > (or with bad DKIM).
I have to say, I'd be surprised if this is was Facebook was doing, but I haven't even looked at DMARC for myself. It's just a milter, yes? And required DKIM? > My solution for such cases - which are few - is to trap the DMARC failure > message from Gmail and then resend the original email as an attachment. Automated? Or is that something you do manually? -- Apple broke AppleScripting signatures in Mail.app, so no random signatures.