From: ahk@chinet.com   
      
   Barryedwin1 wrote:   
      
   >>. . .   
      
   >Yes, that was my problem too.   
   >DKIM on my ISP's email server, requires the email sender's 'From'   
   >address to agree with the email user's email identity for authentication   
   >(claims all other 'From' usage is 'spoofing', even though it is my real   
   >gmail address.   
   >If I want too, I can get the ISP to accept the gmail sender-address, by   
   >dancing through hoops with gmail to authenticate that usage for the   
   >local ISP, which involves some sort of permit-token for the local ISP's   
   >email server (presumably within DKIM), but as I can just switch to the   
   >SeaMonkey browser to send gmail messages, I haven't bothered. HTH   
      
   It's not within DKIM. DKIM comes after From has been set.   
      
   In my case, I authenticate, then can use any From address I like, even   
   from a foreign domain. That does not mean the message will be delivered.   
      
   For instance, a friend I do business with will send me email via his   
   ISP's MX but with the domain he controls on From. My MX rejects it   
   because the TXT record associated with the domain he controls is set to   
   strict and not loose. That's an instruction to everyone else that if the   
   message with that domain on From isn't sent via the the domain's default   
   MX to reject the connection.   
      
   We don't even get to the point of validating DKIM.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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