Doug,

I’m not sure why you equate lack of support for ARC with lack of interest in 
solving the “mailing list” problem.  I think there are many parties interested 
in solving that case, and they’ve determined that ARC isn’t that solution.  Or 
perhaps, isn’t the solution they want due to other issues that come with 
implementation (which are enumerated in Trent’s draft).  I’d say based on the 
interest in DKIM2, there are parties interested in resolving that particular 
problem.

--
Alex Brotman
Sr. Engineer, Anti-Abuse & Messaging Policy
Comcast

From: Douglas Foster <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, March 9, 2026 7:15 AM
To: Laura Atkins <[email protected]>
Cc: IETF DMARC WG <[email protected]>
Subject: [dmarc-ietf] Re: Proposed Recharter to Conclude the ARC Experiment

I would certainly like to believe that evaluators need no advice because they 
know what they are doing, but the evidence suggests otherwise.

The "mailbox problem" indicates that evaluators are not acting in the interest 
of their users, by blocking acceptable messages that users want.   It also 
indicates, indirectly, that evaluators are failing their users because they are 
configured to accept some malicious impersonation that they should be blocking.

Doug Foster




On Mon, Mar 9, 2026 at 6:45 AM Laura Atkins 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On 8 Mar 2026, at 20:59, Murray S. Kucherawy 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

I think we're going in circles here.  You're saying there might be value in ARC 
worth pursuing, and we won't know unless we try.  But for "try" to happen, 
there need to be people interested in putting in the work to get to the answer. 
 I'm not the one that gets to make that call, but I think there's a dearth of 
interest in doing so.

Putting it in the charter doesn't guarantee people will show up to do the work. 
 In fact, part of chartering a WG is asking "Who will do this work if we 
charter it?" and, well, I personally think the answer is plain.

Following on to this. Big mailbox providers have done the work to implement ARC 
signing on their mail. We’ve heard from a few major mailbox providers they have 
looked at using the data on the inbound. They aren’t interested in working on 
more experiments in ARC.

I don’t think there’s anything here and we should just end the ARC experiment.

laura

--
The Delivery Expert

Laura Atkins
Word to the Wise
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Delivery hints and commentary: 
http://www.wordtothewise.com/blog<https://urldefense.com/v3/__http:/www.wordtothewise.com/blog__;!!CQl3mcHX2A!Dln8pxYfwtpEt76WgweiNBTmH9WTb6Wv426tK9l6CB3qC-WZ6H5QG_ZYfVe5RsJ0jADdlwQmwaJ7n7p_O-7N_05kTMLoNCQ$>





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