Individual Submission M. Kucherawy
Internet-Draft Cloudmark
Intended status: Informational May 8, 2010
Expires: November 9, 2010
Using DKIM With Mailing Lists
draft-kucherawy-dkim-lists-00
Abstract
DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) allows an administrative mail
domain (ADMD) to assume some responsibility for a message. As the
industry has now gained some deployment experience, the goal for this
document is to explore the use of DKIM for scenarios that include
intermediaries, such as Mailing List Managers (MLMs).
Status of this Memo
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.2. MLMs In Infrastructure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3. Feedback Loops And Other Bi-Lateral Agreements . . . . . . 5
1.4. Document Scope and Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2. Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1. Other Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.2. DKIM-Specific References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.3. Feedback Loop References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.4. Message Streams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3. Mailing Lists and DKIM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1. Roles and Realities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Types Of Mailing Lists Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Current MLM Effects On Signatures . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.4. Alternatives of Participation and Conformance . . . . . . 10
4. Non-Participating MLMs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1. Author-Related Signing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.2. Verification Outcomes at Receivers . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.3. Handling Choices at Receivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5. Participating MLMs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.1. Author-Related Signing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.2. Verification Outcomes at MLMs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.3. Pros and Cons of Signature Removal . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.4. MLM Signatures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.5. Verification Outcomes at Final Receiving Sites . . . . . . 15
5.6. Handling Choices at Receivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7.1. Authentication Results When Relaying . . . . . . . . . . . 17
8. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
8.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
8.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Appendix A. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Appendix B. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
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1. Introduction
[DKIM] allows an Administrative Mail Domain to take some
responsibility for a [MAIL] message. This can be an author's
organization, an operational relay (Mail Transfer Agent, or MTA) or
one of their agents. Assertion of responsibility is made through a
cryptographic signature. Message transit from author to recipient is
through relays that typically make no substantive change to the
message content and thus preserve the DKIM signature.
In contrast to relays, there are intermediaries, such as mailing list
managers (MLMs), that actively take delivery of messages, re-format
them, and re-post them, almost always invalidating DKIM signatures.
The goal for this document is to explore the use of DKIM for
scenarios that include intermediaries. Questions that will be
discussed include:
o When should an author, or its organization, use DKIM for mail sent
to mailing lists?
o What are the tradeoffs regarding having an MLM verify and use DKIM
identifiers?
o What are the tradeoffs regarding having a mailing list remove
exisitng DKIM signatures prior to re-posting the message?
o What are the tradeoffs regarding having a mailing list add its own
DKIM signature?
These and others are open questions for which there may be no
definitive answers. However, based on experience since the
publication of [DKIM] and its gradual deployment, there are some
useful views worth considering.
This document explores changes to common practice by the signers, the
verifiers and the mailing list managers (MLMs).
1.1. Background
DKIM signatures permit an agent of the email architecture (see
[EMAIL-ARCH]) to make a claim of responsibility for a message by
affixing a domain-level digital signature to the message as it passes
through a gateway. Although not the only possibility, this is most
commonly done as a message passes through a Mail Transport Agent
(MTA) as it departs an Administrative Mail Domain (ADMD) toward the
general Internet.
DKIM signatures will fail to verify if a portion of the message
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covered by one of its hashes is altered. MLMs commonly alter
messages to provide information specific to the mailing list for
which it is providing service. Common modifications include:
o Prefix the Subject: header field with a short string for easy
sorting by receivers' Mail User Agents (MUAs) or other filtering
software;
o Prepend or append list management information to the message's
body, such as some text and/or a URL to which subscribers can go
to make administrative changes to their subscriptions;
o Add header fields such as Reply-To:, Sender:, Resent-Sender:
([MAIL]), List-Id: ([LIST-ID]) or List-Unsubscribe: ([LIST-URLS]).
In some cases, such header fields are replaced if the original
message already contained them.
The DKIM specification documents deliberately refrain from the notion
of tying the signing domain (the "d=" tag in a DKIM signature) to any
identifier within a message; any ADMD could sign any message
regardless of its origin or author domain. As such, there is no
specification of any additional value if the content of the "d=" tag
in the DKIM signature and the value of (for example) the From header
field match, nor is there any obvious degraded value to a signature
where they do not match. Since any DKIM signature is merely an
assertion of "some" responsibility by an ADMD, a DKIM signature added
by an MLM has no more, or less, meaning as a signature with any other
"d=" value.
1.2. MLMs In Infrastructure
The previous section describes some of the things MLMs commonly do
that are not DKIM-friendly, producing broken signatures and thus
reducing the perceived value of DKIM.
Further, despite the advent of standards that are specific to MLM
behaviour (e.g. [MAIL], [LIST-ID] and [LIST-URLS]), their adoption
has been spotty at best. Hence, efforts to specify the use of DKIM
in the context of MLMs needs to be incremental and value-based.
MLM behaviors are well-established and standards compliant. Thus,
the best approach is to provide these best practices to all parties
involved, imposing the minimum requirements possible to MLMs
themselves.
An MLM is an autonomous agent that takes delivery of a message
delivered to it and can re-post it as a new message (or construct a
digest of it along with other messages) to the members of the list
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(see [EMAIL-ARCH], Section 5.3). However, the fact that the From
field of such a message is typically the same as for the original
message and that recipients perceive the message as "from" the
original author rather than the MLM creates confusion about
responsibility and autonomy for the re-posted message. This has
important implications for use of DKIM.
A DKIM signature on a message is an expression of some responsibility
for the message taken by the signing domain. An open question, one
this document intends to address, is some idea of how such a
signature might be applied by an recipient's evaluation module after
the message has gone through a mailing list, and may or may not have
been invalidated, and if so, where the invalidation may have
happened.
1.3. Feedback Loops And Other Bi-Lateral Agreements
A Feedback Loop (FBL) is a bi-lateral agreement between two parties
to exchange reports of abuse. Typically, a bulk mail sender
registers with an email receiving site to receive abuse reports from
that site for mail coming from the sender.
An FBL reporting address is part of this bi-lateral registration.
Some FBLs require DKIM use by the registrant. Messages signed and
sent by a registrant through an MLM can therefore result in having
abuse reports sent to the original author when the actual problem
pertains to the operation of the MLM. However, the original author
has no involvement in operation of the MLM, meaning the FBL report is
not actionable and thus undesirable.
1.4. Document Scope and Goals
This document provides discussion on the above issues, to improve the
handling of possible interactions between DKIM and MLMs. An attempt
has been made to prefer imposing changes to behaviour at the signer
and verifier rather than at the MLM.
Wherever possible, MLMs will be conceptually decoupled from MTAs
despite the very tight integration that is sometimes observed in
implementation. This is done to emphasize the functional
independence of MLM services and responsibilities from those of an
MTA.
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2. Definitions
2.1. Other Terms
See [EMAIL-ARCH] for a general description of the current messaging
architecture, and for definitions of various terms used in this
document.
2.2. DKIM-Specific References
Readers are encouraged to become familiar with [DKIM] and [ADSP]
which are standards-track protocol documents as well as
[DKIM-OVERVIEW] and [DKIM-DEPLOYMENT] which are DKIM's primary
tutorial documents.
2.3. Feedback Loop References
FBLs tend to use the ARF ([I-D.DRAFT-IETF-MARF-BASE]) or the IODEF
([IODEF]) format.
2.4. Message Streams
This document makes reference to the concept of "message streams".
The idea is to identify groups of messages originating from within an
ADMD that are distinct in intent, origin and/or use, and partition
them somehow (most commonly via DNS subdomains, and the "d=" tag
value in the context of DKIM) so as to keep them associated to users
yet operationally distinct.
A good example might be user mail, generated by a company's
employees, versus operational or transactional mail that comes from
automated sources, versus marketing or sales campaigns; each of these
could have different security policies imposed against them, or there
might be a desire to insulate one from the other (e.g., a marketing
campaign that gets reported by many spam filters could cause the
marketing stream's reputation to degrade without automatically
punishing the transactional or user streams).
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3. Mailing Lists and DKIM
It is important to make some distinctions among different MLM-like
agents, their typical implementations, and the impacts they have in a
DKIM-aware environment.
3.1. Roles and Realities
In DKIM parlance, there are several key roles in the transit of a
message:
author: The agent that actually constructed the message being sent
through the system, and performed the initial submission. This
can be a human using an MUA or a common system utility such as
"cron", etc.
originator: The agent that accepts a message from the author,
ensures it conforms to the relevant standards such as [MAIL], and
then relays it toward its destination(s). This is often referred
to as the Mail Submission Agent (MSA).
signer: The agent that affixes one or more DKIM signature(s) to a
message on its way toward its ultimate destination. It is
typically running at the MTA that sits between the author's ADMD
and the general Internet. The signer and the sender may also be
the same agent.
verifier: The agent that conducts DKIM signature analysis. It is
typically running at the MTA that sits between the receiver's ADMD
and the general Internet. Note that any agent that handles a
signed message could conduct verification; this document only
considers that action and its outcomes either at an MLM or at the
receiver.
receiver: The agent that is the final transit relay for the message
prior to being delivered to the recipient(s) of the message.
In the case of simple user-to-user mail, these roles are fairly
straightforward. However, when one is sending mail to a list, which
then gets relayed to all of that list's subscribers, the roles are
often less clear to the general user, as particular agents may hold
multiple important but separable roles. The above definitions are
intended to enable more precise discussion of the mechanisms
involved.
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3.2. Types Of Mailing Lists Lists
There are four common MLM implementation modes:
aliasing: An aliasing MLM (see Section 5.1 of [EMAIL-ARCH]) is one
that makes no changes to a message as it redistributes; any
modifications are constrained to changes to the [SMTP] envelope
recipient list (RCPT commands) only. There are no changes to the
message body at all and only [MAIL] trace header fields are added.
The output of such an MLM is considered to be a continuation of
the author's original message. An example of such an MLM is a
address that expands directly in the MTA, such as a list of local
system administrators used for relaying operational or other
internal-only messages.
resending: A resending MLM (see Sections 5.2 and 5.3 of
[EMAIL-ARCH]) is one that may make changes to a message. The
output of such an MLM is considered to be a new message; delivery
of the original has been completed prior to distribution of the
re-posted message. Such messages are often re-formatted, such as
with list-specific header fields or other properties, to
facilitate discussion among list subscribers.
authoring: An authoring MLM is one that creates the content being
sent as well as initiating its transport, rather than basing it on
one or more messages received earlier. This is a special case of
the MLM paradigm, one which generates its own content and does not
act as an intermediary. Typically replies are not generated, or
if they are, they go to a specific recipient and not back to the
list's full set of recipients. Examples include newsletters and
bulk marketing mail.
digesting: A special case of the re-posting MLM is one that sends a
single message comprising an aggregation of recent MLM submissons,
which might be a message of [MIME] type "multipart/digest" (see
[MIME-TYPES]). This is obviously a new message but it may contain
a sequence of original messages that may themselves have been
DKIM-signed.
The remainder of this document operates on the presumption that a
message going through a re-posting MLM actually comprises two message
transactions:
1. Originating user to MLM: Originating user is author; originating
ADMD is signer; MLM's ADMD is verifier; MLM's input function is
receiver.
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2. MLM to receivers: MLM (sending its reconstructed copy of the
originating user's message) is author; MLM's ADMD is signer; the
ADMD of each subscriber of the list is a verifier; each
subscriber is a receiver.
Much of this document focuses on the resending MLM as it has the most
direct conflict operationally with DKIM.
3.3. Current MLM Effects On Signatures
As described above, an aliasing MLM does not affect any existing
signature, and an authoring MLM is always new content and thus there
is never an existing signature. However, the changes a resending MLM
can make typically affect the Subject: header field, addition of some
list-specific header fields, or the addition of some list-specific
text to the top or bottom of the message body. The impacts of each
of these on DKIM verification are discussed below.
Subject tags: Altering the Subject: header field will invalidate the
signer's signature if that header field was covered by a hash of
that signature. [DKIM] lists Subject as one that should be
covered, so this is expected to be an issue for any list that
makes such changes.
List-specific header fields: Some lists will add header fields
specific to list administrative functions such as those defined in
[LIST-ID] and [LIST-URLS], or the "Resent-" fields defined in
[MAIL]. It is unlikely that a typical MUA would include such
fields in an original message, and DKIM is resilient to the
addition of header fields in general (though see notes about the
"h=" tag in Section 3.5 of [DKIM]). Therefore this is seen as
less of a concern.
Other header fields: Some lists will add or replace header fields
such as "Reply-To" or "Sender" in order to establish that the
message is being sent in the context of the mailing list, so that
the list is identified ("Sender") and any user replies go to the
list ("Reply-To"). If these fields were included in the original
message, it is possible that one or more of them may have been
signed, and this could cause a concern for MLMs that add or
replace them.
Body changes: Some lists prepend or append a few lines to each
message to remind subscribers of an administrative URL for
subscription issues, or of list policy, etc. Changes to the body
will alter the body hash computed at the DKIM verifier, so these
pose an immediate problem.
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3.4. Alternatives of Participation and Conformance
As DKIM becomes more entrenched, it is highly desirable that MLM
software adopt more DKIM-friendly processing.
Changes that merely add new header fields, such as those specified by
[LIST-ID], [LIST-URLS] and [MAIL] are generally the most friendly to
a DKIM-participating email infrastructure in that their addition by
an MLM will not affect any existing DKIM signatures unless those
fields were already present and covered by a signature's hash or a
signature was created specifically to disallow their addition (see
the note about "h=" in Section 3.5 of [DKIM]). The shortest path to
success for DKIM would be to mandate that all MLM software be re-
designed or re-configured with that goal in mind.
However, the practice of applying headers and footers to message
bodies is common and not expected to fade regardless of what
documents this or any standards body might produce. This sort of
change will invalidate the signature on a message where the body hash
covers the entire entire message. Thus, the following sections also
investigate and recommend other processing alternatives.
A possible mitigation to this incompatibility is use of the "l=" tag
to bound the portion of the body covered by the body hash, but this
has security considerations (see Section 3.5 of [DKIM]).
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4. Non-Participating MLMs
This section contains a discussion of issues regarding sending DKIM-
signed mail to or through an MLM that is not DKIM-aware.
Specifically, the header fields introduced by [DKIM] and
[AUTH-RESULTS] carry no special meaning to such an MLM.
4.1. Author-Related Signing
If an author knows that the MLM to which a message is being sent is a
non-participating resending MLM, the author is advised to be cautious
when deciding whether or not to sign the message. The MLM could make
a change that would invalidate the author's signature but not remove
it prior to re-distribution.
Hence list recipients would receive a message message purportedly
from the author but bearing a DKIM signature that would not verifiy.
This problem would be compounded further if there were receivers that
applied signing policies ([ADSP]) and the author published any kind
of strict policy.
If this is cause for concern, the originating site can consider using
a sub-domain for the "personal" mail that is different from domain(s)
used for other mail streams, so that they develop independent
reputations, and more stringent policies (including ADSP) can be
applied to the mail stream(s) that do not go through mailing lists.
There is also a concern if the author's domain posts a restrictive
ADSP policy such as "discardable" and no author signature is applied
at all. Such a posting obviously violates the published policy and
the message is subject to rejection by any receiver that applies
ADSP.
However, all of this presupposes a level of infrastructure
understanding that is not expected to be common. Thus, it will be
incumbent upon site administrators to consider how support of users
wishing to participate in mailing lists might be accomplished as DKIM
achieves wider adoption. A common suggestion is to establish
subdomains in the DNS that are used for separating different streams
of mail from within an ADMD, such as user-created "direct" mail from
transactional or automated mail; some of these may be signed and some
not, some with published ADSP records, some not. In general, the
more strict practices and policies are likely to be successful only
for the mail streams subject to the most end-to-end control by the
originating organization. That typically excludes mail going through
MLMs.
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4.2. Verification Outcomes at Receivers
Verifiers that receive mail bearing DKIM signatures that fail to
verify might benefit from attempting to detect that such mail passed
through a non-participating MLM and then decide not to apply [ADSP]
in order to avoid aggressive filtering of mail that should otherwise
have been delivered.
Unfortunately, there may not be a reliable way of making such
determinations, as there is no uniform MLM behaviour, and any tagging
mechanism meant to relay such information could easily be abused.
Note that the underlying problem is the operational choice to use
ADSP in a message stream that does not maintain the signature.
4.3. Handling Choices at Receivers
A receiver's ADMD would have to have some way to register such non-
participating lists to exempt them from the filtering described in
Section 4.1. This is, however, probably not a scalable solution as
it imposes a burden on the receiver that is predicated on sender
behaviour.
Note that the [DKIM] specification explicitly directs verifiers to
treat a verification failure as though the message were not signed in
the first place. In the absence of specific ADSP direction, any
treatment of a verification failure as having special meaning is
either outside the scope of DKIM or is in violation of it.
[ADSP] presents an additional challenge. Per that specification,
when a message is unsigned or the signature can no longer be
verified, the verifier must discard the message. There is no
exception in the policy for a message that may have been altered by
an MLM. Verifiers are thus advised to honor the policy and disallow
the message. Furthermore, authors whose ADSP is published as
"discardable" are advised not to send mail to MLMs as it is likely to
be rejected by ADSP-aware recipients. (This is discussed further in
Section 5.3 below.)
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5. Participating MLMs
This section contains a discussion of issues regarding sending DKIM-
signed mail to or through an MLM that is DKIM-aware, and may also be
ADSP-aware.
5.1. Author-Related Signing
MLMs typically attempt to authenticate messages posted through them.
They usually do this through the trivial (and insecure) means of
verifying the From field email address against a list registry. DKIM
enables a stronger form of authentication, although this is not yet
formally documented: It can require that messages using a given From
address also have a DKIM signature with a corresponding "d=" domain.
(Note, however, that it is entirely reasonable for an MLM to permit
registration of some other "d=" domain as valid evidence of such
authentication.) This feature would be somewhat similar to using
ADSP, except that the requirement for it would be imposed by the MLM
and not the author's organization.
An important consideration is that authors rarely have any direct
influence over the management of an MLM. As such, a signed message
from an author will in essence go to a set of unexpected places.
Authors may be well-advised to create a DNS domain specifically used
for generating signatures when sending traffic to MLMs. This becomes
important as domain-based reputation systems begin to appear as
components of mail filtering modules.
5.2. Verification Outcomes at MLMs
As described above, the MLM may conduct DKIM verification of a signed
message to attempt to confirm the identity of the author. Although
it is a common and intuitive conclusion, however, not all signed mail
will include an author signature (see [ADSP]). MLM implementors are
advised to accomodate such in their configurations. For example, an
MLM might be designed to accomodate a list of possible signing
domains (the "d=" portion of a DKIM signature) for a given author,
and determine at verification time if any of those are present.
A message that cannot be thus authenticated could be held for
moderation or rejected outright.
This logic could apply to any list operation, not just list
submission. In particular, this improved authentication could apply
to subscription, unsubscription, and/or changes to subscriber options
that are sent via email rather than through an authenticated,
interactive channel such as the web.
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In the case of verification of signatures on subscriptions, MLMs are
advised to add an [AUTH-RESULTS] header field to indicate the
signature(s) observed on the submission as it arrived at the MLM and
what the outcome of the evaluation was.
5.3. Pros and Cons of Signature Removal
If the MLM is configured to make changes to the message prior to re-
posting that would invalidate the original signature(s), further
action is recommended to prevent invalidated signatures from arriving
at final recipients, possibly triggering unwarranted filter actions.
A possible solution would be to:
1. Attempt verification of all DKIM signatures present on the
message;
2. Apply local policy to authenticate the identity of the author;
3. Add an [AUTH-RESULTS] header field to the message to indicate the
results of the above;
4. Remove all previously-evaluated DKIM signatures;
5. Affix a new signature that covers the Authentication-Results
header field just added.
Removing the original signature(s) seems particularly appropriate
when the MLM knows it is likely to invalidate any or all of them due
to the nature of the reformatting it will do. This avoids false
negatives at the list's subscribers in their roles as receivers of
the message.
However, per the discussion in [AUTH-RESULTS], there is no a priori
reason for the final receivers to put any faith in the veracity of
that header field when added by the MLM. Thus, the final recipients
of the message have no way to verify on their own the authenticity of
the author's identity on that message.
Since an aliasing MLM makes no substantive changes to a message, it
need not consider the issue of signature removal as the original
signatures should arrive at least to the next MTA unmodified.
An authoring MLM is closed to outside submitters, thus much of this
discussion does not apply in that case.
[ADSP] presents a particular challenge. An author domain posting a
policy of "discardable" imposes a very tight restriction on the use
of mailing lists, essentially constraining that domain's users to
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lists operated by aliasing MLMs only; any MLM that alters a message
from such a domain or removes its signature subjects the message to
severe action by receivers. A resending MLM is advised to reject
outright any mail from an author whose domain posts such a policy as
it is likely to be rejected by any ADSP-aware recipients.
5.4. MLM Signatures
DKIM-aware resending MLMs and authoring MLMs are encouraged to affix
their own signatures when distributing messages. Such MLMs are
advised to ensure the signature's header hash will cover:
o Any [AUTH-RESULTS] fields added by the MLM;
o Any [LIST-ID] or [LIST-URLS] fields added by the MLM;
o Any [MAIL] fields, especially Sender and Reply-To, added or
replaced by the MLM.
A DKIM-aware resending MLM is encouraged to sign the entire message
as it arrived, especially including the original signatures.
DKIM-aware authoring MLMs are advised to sign the mail they send
according to the regular signing guidelines given in [DKIM].
5.5. Verification Outcomes at Final Receiving Sites
In general, verifiers and receivers can treat a signed message from
an MLM like any other signed message; indeed, it would be difficult
to discern any difference.
However, because the author domain will commonly be different from
the MLM's signing domain, there may be a conflict with [ADSP] as
discussed in Section 4.3 and Section 5.3.
5.6. Handling Choices at Receivers
A recipient that trusts signatures from an MLM may wish to extend
that trust to an [AUTH-RESULTS] header field signed by that MLM. The
recipient may then do additional processing of the message, using the
results recorded in the Authentication-Results header field instead
of the original author's DKIM signature. This includes possibly
processing the message as per ADSP requirements.
Receivers are advisedto ignore all unsigned Authentication-Results
header fields.
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6. IANA Considerations
This document includes no IANA actions.
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7. Security Considerations
This document provides suggested or best current practices for use
with DKIM, and as such does not introduce any new technologies for
consideration. However, the following security issues should be
considered when implementing the above practices.
7.1. Authentication Results When Relaying
some stuff about the fact that the MLM's auth-results can't be
trusted by default
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8. References
8.1. Normative References
[ADSP] Allman, E., Delany, M., Fenton, J., and J. Levine, "DKIM
Sender Signing Practises", RFC 5617, August 2009.
[DKIM] Allman, E., Callas, J., Delany, M., Libbey, M., Fenton,
J., and M. Thomas, "DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM)
Signatures", RFC 4871, May 2007.
[MAIL] Resnick, P., "Internet Message Format", RFC 5322,
October 2008.
8.2. Informative References
[AUTH-RESULTS]
Kucherawy, M., "Message Header Field for Indicating
Message Authentication Status", RFC 5451, April 2009.
[DKIM-DEPLOYMENT]
Hansen, T., Siegel, E., Hallam-Baker, P., and D. Crocker,
"DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) Development, Deployment
and Operations", I-D DRAFT-IETF-DKIM-DEPLOYMENT,
January 2010.
[DKIM-OVERVIEW]
Hansen, T., Crocker, D., and P. Hallam-Baker, "DomainKeys
Identified Mail (DKIM) Service Overview", RFC 5585,
July 2009.
[EMAIL-ARCH]
Crocker, D., "Internet Mail Architecture", RFC 5598,
July 2009.
[I-D.DRAFT-IETF-MARF-BASE]
Shafranovich, Y., Levine, J., and M. Kucherawy, "An
Extensible Format for Email Feedback Reports", I-D DRAFT-
IETF-MARF-BASE, April 2010.
[IODEF] Danyliw, R., Meijer, J., and Y. Demchenko, "The Incident
Object Description Exchange Format", RFC 5070,
December 2007.
[LIST-ID] Chandhok, R. and G. Wenger, "List-Id: A Structured Field
and Namespace for the Identification of Mailing Lists",
RFC 2919, March 2001.
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[LIST-URLS]
Neufeld, G. and J. Baer, "The Use of URLs as Meta-Syntax
for Core Mail List Commands and their Transport through
Message Header Fields", RFC 2369, July 1998.
[MIME] Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part One: Format of Internet Message
Bodies", RFC 2045, November 1996.
[MIME-TYPES]
Freed, N. and N. Borenstein, "Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) Part Two: Media Types", RFC 2046,
November 1996.
[SMTP] Klensin, J., "Simple Mail Transfer Protocol", RFC 5321,
October 2008.
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Appendix A. Acknowledgements
The author wishes to acknowledge the following for their review and
constructive criticism of this document: Dave Crocker, JD Falk, Tony
Hansen and S. Moonesamy.
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Appendix B. Examples
[TBD]
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Author's Address
Murray S. Kucherawy
Cloudmark
128 King St., 2nd Floor
San Francisco, CA 94107
US
Phone: +1 415 946 3800
Email: msk@cloudmark.com
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