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Jerry Lerman

Jerry@hear-me.social
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2 posts • 13 comments

Admin/owner of this Boston-area server. A liberal who also follows conservatives who use facts to form opinions & are good people. I hate when people agendize everything. I play around with Linux.

I also own:
Phanpy: https://phanpy.hear-me.social
Peertube: https://my-sunshine.video
Friendica: https://my-place.social
Piefed: https://feddit.online
XMPP: https://between-us.online
Bluesky PDS: https://blue-ocean.social

he/him/his

#StarTrek #ScienceFiction #Linux

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@daniel@masto.doserver.top
I’ve never had issues making changes, so I think it wouldn’t be an issue. The caches should recognize they need updating.

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@nimi@norrebro.space
Hi,

Depending on the ISP, after making the changes, it usually takes up to 15 minutes for the changes to get distributed to all the DNS servers worldwide. It’s pretty quick.

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@Ruaphoc@mstdn.games
Thanks for this! This is on my list to look at this weekend. Thank you!

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@idoubtit@mstdn.social
Mailpoet is a Wordpress plugin? You should still have appropriate SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records.

If you gave Mailpoet the right to use your email’s SMTP server (is this how it works?) then you’re fine because it’s using your credentials and SPF will pass as the SMTP server is authorized to send email for your credentials.

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@esplovago@mastodon.uno
Yep.

If you want to have different rules for subdomains, then the records get much more complicated. but “v=spf1 -all” pertains to the domain and subdomains.

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@b3lt3r@mastodon.b3lt3r.com I’m far from an expert, but if your redirect is at the server, and your server adds a “.forward” to the email, and does not alter anything, you should be fine because your SPF and DKIM should pass.

If your redirect is via an email client, or the server doesn’t add a .forward, it may alter the email slightly, but in a way sufficient for DKIM to fail because the hash won’t match any longer. But, I think in this case, if SPF passes, your email client would still accept it since the original DKIM passed before the forwarding.

It gets really complicated. Suggest you try it.

And this is based on my understanding, which, who knows?

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@Dero_10@mastodon.sdf.org @pteryx@dice.camp
I had that issue a lot when I was running a Linux server in the cloud. It’s why I stopped using my own Wireguard VPN server I hosted on Digital Ocean. So many sites would block it.

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@adingbatponder@fosstodon.org
Can you open a support ticket for help? Or, maybe, they’ve already done it for you. You can check at https://www.dnsdomainlookup.com/ and pick dns summary from the dropdown.

If you see the spf, dkim, and dmarc records, then you’re all set.

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@amberage @pteryx
Your points, I think, are very valid. And I live with the fear that I will end up with the same fate.

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