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Dear Barry,<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 21/07/2018 04:47, <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:bzs@theworld.com">bzs@theworld.com</a>
wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:23378.44253.593621.945289@gargle.gargle.HOWL">
<pre wrap="">And the speaker said: Reputational services! They are being developed
and will augment this protocol to solve exactly that problem.
2003.
Do you see any reputational services? I don't.
Or not beyond some singular efforts where a search engine tries to
flag a link as potentially malicious.</pre>
</blockquote>
<br>
There is a lot of added software coming from the likes of Symantec
& others that perform reputational services, only you don't see
it because all the spam that they filter out is essentially not seen
by the end user. Same for all of the blacklists like SpamCop etc.
That's DNS reputational services for you. You can go as far as
actually not really knowing what these people do and sub-contracting
your email handling to the Microsoft Cloud or Google/Gmail, or other
hosted spam filtering services.<br>
<br>
BTW am I the only person who is still amazed at how many companies
including banks neither use DKIM nor TLS for their emails?<br>
<br>
Kindest regards,<br>
<br>
Olivier<br>
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