| > There are several IPs that are completely banned on my firewall because they send shitloads of spam over dozens of domains. I understand that that is the case. I said that it shouldn't be the case and why. So, what's your point? > And some IPs are just inherently not trustworthy (Tor exit nodes, North Korean IPs, etc.) Noone is saying you should be trusting those IPs. I said domain trust should override IP distrust. So, again, what is your point? > Everyone can setup a SPF and DKIM record on their domain. It's not hard. Which is obviously the premise of using them to override IP distrust? So ... what is your point? > IPs have reputation and you better deal with it because most sysadmins on your receiving end won't deal with any special snowflake configuration. I think I wouldn't write "It totally should be" if that were the current reality, would I? So ... what is your point in explaining what I am obviously aware of? Also, you might be surprised, but "special snowflake configuration" is how every change starts. So, if your argument were to be taken seriously, we should never have introduced SPF, because the first person to use SPF had a very special snowflake configuration indeed. > This isn't exclusive to Gmail, this is basically any mail service and server out there. Erm, yeah, thanks for repeating half a dozen times the obvious premise of my comment. |
I don't trust certain IPs. Why should the presence of a SPF or DKIM override my trust of these IPs? If that is the case, why should it be for any other IP?
>Which is obviously the premise of using them to override IP distrust?
Which is my premise for why having them override IP trust is completely useless. There is nothing involved in the process of setting up SPF or DKIM that would make me trust a domain if the IP is not trusted.