It's not really a question of dealing with it one way or another, it's just that I'd like you and any other customer in a similar situation to be setup in a reliable way that you can expect to work indefinitely without needing any special setup.dhwalker wrote: ↑Fri Jan 12, 2024 4:43 pm Nevertheless, I think it's clear that you, representing Sonic, don't want to deal with how I've had mail delivery for the past several years (most of which with Sonic), so I'll read up on EasyDNS's POP/IMAP service and Sonic's support for non-Sonic DNS domains and decide which way to move.
Questions about upcoming Google DMARC/DKIM requirement
Internet access discussion, including Fusion, IP Broadband, and Gigabit Fiber!
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Kelsey Cummings
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
I just noticed that one of my subdomains does not have DKIM signing. I sent an email to Support with full details, and received an email response directing me to ask in the forum.
What's the best way to provide the details without revealing personal information? ...thanks!
What's the best way to provide the details without revealing personal information? ...thanks!
Opening an email ticket with support, but this is an unusual request. What's the ticket number from your earlier attempt?virtualmike wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2024 8:16 pm I just noticed that one of my subdomains does not have DKIM signing. I sent an email to Support with full details, and received an email response directing me to ask in the forum.
Kelsey Cummings
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
Thanks to Kelsey, this issue has been resolved. Emails from my subdomain now are getting DKIM signatures.
*Deleted for privacy.*
While you could theoretically paste the public in I would not recommend that approach. The better option is to add a CNAME to the sonic.net key which is what we do for all of the domains we're authoritative for.
net23._domainkey.YOUR_DOMAIN.TLD. CNAME net23._domainkey.sonic.net.
Once that's done, please send a ticket to support@sonic.net with a request to update our local config to allow our servers to sign mail on your behalf. Be sure to include that I instructed you to do this and that the ticket should be routed to ops. This is an unusual request.
net23._domainkey.YOUR_DOMAIN.TLD. CNAME net23._domainkey.sonic.net.
Once that's done, please send a ticket to support@sonic.net with a request to update our local config to allow our servers to sign mail on your behalf. Be sure to include that I instructed you to do this and that the ticket should be routed to ops. This is an unusual request.
Kelsey Cummings
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
System Architect, Sonic.net, Inc.
*Deleted for privacy.*
Replace YOUR_DOMAIN.TLD with the domain used for the emails you send.
For example, if your domain is foobar.com, the hostname would be net23._domainkey.foobar.com
You are correct for the value.
For example, if your domain is foobar.com, the hostname would be net23._domainkey.foobar.com
You are correct for the value.
Ok thanks, I am going to be deleting my comments for privacy reasons, other than to ask if the following is relevant to your recommendation or not? I would prefer not to get shut down or blacklisted for doing this incorrectly (if that's even a thing?). I have no frame of reference to understand what this RFC org is or how they govern the inner workings of the net, etc.
A DKIM record is really a DNS TXT ("text") record. TXT records can be used to store any text that a domain administrator wants to associate with their domain. DKIM is one of many uses for this type of DNS record. (In some cases, domains have stored their DKIM records as CNAME records that point to the key instead; however, the official RFC requires these records to be TXT.)
Source Link: https://www.cloudflare.com/learning/dns ... im-record/
Thanks!
A DKIM record is really a DNS TXT ("text") record. TXT records can be used to store any text that a domain administrator wants to associate with their domain. DKIM is one of many uses for this type of DNS record. (In some cases, domains have stored their DKIM records as CNAME records that point to the key instead; however, the official RFC requires these records to be TXT.)
Source Link: https://www.cloudflare.com/learning/dns ... im-record/
Thanks!
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