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by simon360
1766 days ago
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DNSSEC is in a whole different league. But I'd be very skeptical of putting a one-liner from a generator into my DNS without understanding, at least at a basic level, _what_ it was doing. Understanding that also means you can do some manual verification - take a look at email headers to see how mail servers are responding to your configuration, etc. etc. As for configuring a mail server, yes, that's definitely way harder. But these days, most companies outsource that to the likes of Google or Microsoft, until they get large enough to justify administering their own. There's exceptions to every rule, etc. etc., but every company I've worked at has either used G Suite or Office 365. The result being: many companies have email services running, but don't have anybody whose day-to-day is understanding how it works and how it's secured. |
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You're completely right, of course. In my experience, these generators usually explain what the generated code means, though. These records are a lot easier to read than they are to write if all you've got is a manual and a technical specification.
I haven't used any hosted mailing services myself, but I can't imagine their control panels don't have either an option to generate the necessarily policies for you or an extensive guide on how you should configure these records and why. These records are the only part of the mail ecosystem these hosted platforms can't manage (unless you also let them do DNS) so they're a crucial step of the onboarding process.