Of couse I could "explain my Gmail mailbox not move messages" by James - but I assumed the person sending 3-4 messages daily to this mailing list might be asked to consider to fix his own settings (MX and http certificate).
The Chrome warning for harte-lyne.ca looks dreadful by the way.
Regards Alex
On Tue, November 11, 2014 12:34 pm, Alexander Farber wrote:
Of couse I could "explain my Gmail mailbox not move messages" by James - but I assumed the person sending 3-4 messages daily to this mailing list might be asked to consider to fix his own settings (MX and http certificate).
The Chrome warning for harte-lyne.ca looks dreadful by the way.
And out of my childishness again (to contradict anything ;-)... I have no bad feelings about domain that decided no to pay CA for signed Certificate. As somebody mentioned, to keep internet in harmony, these should not be in hands of commercial Certification Authorities, but DNS authorities instead should be involved here in establishing the chain of trust and identity of domain instance.
Just my $0.01 (plus $0.01 borrowed from somebody else ;-)
Valeri
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
On Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 12:34 PM, Alexander Farber alexander.farber@gmail.com wrote:
Of couse I could "explain my Gmail mailbox not move messages" by James - but I assumed the person sending 3-4 messages daily to this mailing list might be asked to consider to fix his own settings (MX and http certificate).
The Chrome warning for harte-lyne.ca looks dreadful by the way.
That's something different - and I think that the emails as originated by James are probably correct. It is just the versions forwarded by the mailing list that fail gmail's DMARC test. And in any case, only the site admin can fix these things.