DMARC, which stands for "Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance", is a technical specification created by a group of organizations that want to help reduce the potential for email-based abuse by solving a couple of long-standing operational, deployment, and reporting issues related to email authentication protocols.
DMARC standardizes how email receivers perform email authentication using the well-known SPF and DKIM mechanisms. This means that senders will experience consistent authentication results for their messages at AOL, Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo! and any other email receiver implementing DMARC. We hope this will encourage senders to more broadly authenticate their outbound email which can make email a more reliable way to communicate.
Why is DMARC Important?
With the rise of the social internet and the ubiquity of e-commerce,
spammers and phishers have a tremendous financial incentive to
compromise user accounts, enabling theft of passwords, bank accounts,
credit cards, and more. Email is easy to spoof and criminals have found
spoofing to be a proven way to exploit user trust of well-known brands.
Simply inserting the logo of a well known brand into an email gives it
instant legitimacy with many users.
Users can't tell a real message from a fake one, and large mailbox
providers have to make very difficult (and frequently incorrect) choices
about which messages to deliver and which ones might harm users.
Senders remain largely unaware of problems with their authentication
practices because there's no scalable way for them to indicate they want
feedback and where it should be sent. Those attempting new SPF and DKIM
deployment proceed very slowly and cautiously because the lack of
feedback also means they have no good way to monitor progress and debug
problems.
DMARC addresses these issues, helping email senders and receivers
work together to better secure emails, protecting users and brands from
painfully costly abuse.
How Does DMARC Work?
A DMARC policy allows a sender to indicate that their emails are
protected by SPF and/or DKIM, and tells a receiver what to do if neither
of those authentication methods passes - such as junk or reject the
message. DMARC removes guesswork from the receiver's handling of these
failed messages, limiting or eliminating the user's exposure to
potentially fraudulent & harmful messages. DMARC also provides a way
for the email receiver to report back to the sender about messages that
pass and/or fail DMARC evaluation.
David Baud
K O S M O S P R O D U C T i O N S
david@kosmos-productions.com
On May 8, 2014, at 6:11 , Chris Zwar <chris@chriszwar.com> wrote:
So what is probably happening with the AE list is that somewhere, a mail server is experiencing an unusually large amount of SPAM traffic, and so it has been blocked by other ISPs at a very basic level. This is not the same as being added to a SPAM blacklist, or having AE list emails being confused as SPAM. That's not happening. It just means that some services (such as Gmail) are refusing ALL emails that come from the same mail server - whether it's a legitimate AE list email or one selling discount meds and so on…