Did you know that if a spammer uses your email address as the FROM: address, which is easy to do, all the bounce messages will go to your email address? If the spammer really hates you, they will send millions of emails with your FROM: address and you will get a million bounce messages.

Can you stop this or prevent this? No

Why would a mail provider send you a bounce message, knowing you’re innocent? Because that’s how someone wrote the protocol back then, and nobody changes it or does it differently because … reasons.

Does the spammer get a bounce message? Nope, not one.

Does the SMTP sending account owner whose credentials were stolen be notified about bounces so they can stop the spam? Nope.

Just millions of emails sent every day to poor schlameels who have no idea why they are getting them and who can’t do anything about them.

The more I learn about the email protocols, the more I realize how terrible the design is.

#emailsecurity #spoofing #cybersecurity #spam

  • Jerry on PieFed@feddit.online
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    5 days ago

    If the email is not accepted by the receiving imap or pop3 server, it sometimes follows the DMARC instructions for reporting. The report goes to the domain owner of the sending domain. This is done by the receiving server. SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are instructions to the RECEIVING email server, not to the sending email server.

    The bounce I’m talking about is from your SMTP server that is following the protocol to let you know, as a courtesy, that your email could not be delivered. And that protocol simply says, in the absence of anything else saying otherwise, tell the FROM: address that their message did not get delivered, even if there is strong evidence that the FROM: address is a fraud.