Message-ID: <6775f80a@news.ausics.net> From: Computer Nerd Kev Subject: Exclude Email Address or Sub-Domain from DMARC Checks Newsgroups: comp.mail.misc User-Agent: tin/2.0.1-20111224 ("Achenvoir") (UNIX) (Linux/2.4.31 (i686)) NNTP-Posting-Host: news.ausics.net Date: 2 Jan 2025 12:20:58 +1000 Organization: Ausics - https://newsgroups.ausics.net Lines: 22 X-Complaints: abuse@ausics.net Path: ...!weretis.net!feeder9.news.weretis.net!news.bbs.nz!news.ausics.net!not-for-mail Bytes: 1459 I'm starting to wonder if DMARC failures due to mailing lists forwarding my messages to them and breaking DKIM/SPF in the process _might_ be harming my mail server's reputation*. Can the specific email accounts which I've subscribed to mailing lists be excluded somehow from DMARC checks or DKIM and SPF? Or a different sub-domain pointing to the same server which I can use in email addresses subscribed to mailing lists? Or do I have to use a different domain entirely for those addresses in order to bypass DMARC on the current domain? So far it looks like this is the case, but I thought I'd check in case I missed something. * I know this is backwards to how it's meant to work and probably wrong, but there's some correlation and it would be good to eliminate the possibility. Plus it would clean up the DMARC reports I receive. -- __ __ #_ < |\| |< _#