
alex at ergens
Jan 16, 2007, 3:42 PM
Post #1 of 1
(1224 views)
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On Tue, Jan 16, 2007 at 05:15:09PM -0600, Steve Yates wrote: > In most situations I've run across if the receiver detects the sending > IP doesn't have a reverse DNS record, they may reject the message...it > doesn't matter what the reverse DNS *is*, they just want it to exist. Sure, I understand that part. But besides the SPF "ptr" mechanism, I know there are other situations where it does make a difference. Just one example: http://www.postfix.org/uce.html#reject_unknown_client As I said before, I have reasons to believe something similar is used in scoring systems (e.g. wrong configuration results in 0.1, and at 5.0 you're out). If I may paraphrase: your "It doesn't matter." vs. my "Often the other end does not pay attention to it but there are cases where doing it right does matter." > It would be ideal to have the forward and reverse DNS match, but many > ISPs just set up dummy names like ip-__-__-__-__.something.example.net. Yes. Why encourage them by saying it doesn't matter ? I agree they do so, but that does not make it OK (... irrelevant ...). I won't object when you say it usually doesn't hurt. But don't say it is OK to do it like this, and do make clear that this does not cover 100% of all cases. When you say it is irrelevant, there's yet another soul on this earth who is misinformed. He may help his peers/neighbours/office, they also spread the news and before you know it another generation of click-and-drool types is born. People remember your statement, and don't RTFM. Before you know it there's that "but Steve said ..." argument. HTH Alex ------- Archives at http://archives.listbox.com/spf-help/current/ or http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/spf/help/ (easier to search) To unsubscribe, change your address, or temporarily deactivate your subscription, please go to http://v2.listbox.com/member/?member_id=1311530&user_secret=5f6145ca
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