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  2. DMARC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMARC

    reject asks receivers to outright reject messages that fail DMARC check. The policy published can be mitigated by applying it to only a percentage of the messages that fail DMARC check. Receivers are asked to select the given percentage of messages by a simple Bernoulli sampling algorithm.

  3. Authenticated Received Chain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authenticated_Received_Chain

    DMARC allows a sender's domain to indicate that their emails are protected by SPF and/or DKIM, and tells a receiving service what to do if neither of those authentication methods passes - such as to reject the message. However, a strict DMARC policy may block legitimate emails sent through a mailing list or forwarder, as the DKIM signature will ...

  4. Email authentication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_authentication

    In the early 1980s, when Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) was designed, it provided for no real verification of sending user or system. This was not a problem while email systems were run by trusted corporations and universities, but since the commercialization of the Internet in the early 1990s, spam, phishing, and other crimes have been found to increasingly involve email.

  5. DomainKeys Identified Mail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DomainKeys_Identified_Mail

    DMARC provides the ability for an organisation to publish a policy that specifies which mechanism (DKIM, SPF, or both) is employed when sending email from that domain; how to check the From: field presented to end users; how the receiver should deal with failures—and a reporting mechanism for actions performed under those policies. [13]

  6. Why did I receive an email from MAILER-DAEMON? - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/what-is-a-mailer-daemon...

    When you get a message from a "MAILER-DAEMON" or a "Mail Delivery Subsystem" with a subject similar to "Failed Delivery," this means that an email you sent was undeliverable and has been bounced back to you.

  7. Sender Policy Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framework

    Sender Policy Framework (SPF) is an email authentication method that ensures the sending mail server is authorized to originate mail from the email sender's domain. [1] [2] This authentication only applies to the email sender listed in the "envelope from" field during the initial SMTP connection.

  8. Why can't I send mail to AOL Mail users? - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/aol-mail-addresses-are-not...

    Find out more about why your messages to AOL members keep getting rejected.

  9. Brand Indicators for Message Identification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brand_Indicators_for...

    To implement BIMI, companies need a valid DMARC DNS record with a policy of either quarantine or reject, an exact square logo for the brand in SVG Tiny P/S format, [3] and a DNS TXT record for the domain indicating the URI location of the SVG file.