About: Abuse Reporting Format is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6 publications have been published within this topic receiving 30 citations. The topic is also known as: ARF.
TL;DR: This memo presents extensions to the Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) and Sender Policy Framework (SPF) specifications to allow for detailed reporting of message authentication failures in an on-demand fashion.
Abstract: This memo presents extensions to the Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) and
Sender Policy Framework (SPF) specifications to allow for detailed
reporting of message authentication failures in an on-demand fashion.
This memo updates RFC 4408 by providing an IANA registry for SPF
modifiers. [STANDARDS-TRACK]
TL;DR: This memo registers an extension report type for the Abuse Reporting Format (ARF), affecting multiple registries, for use in generating receipt-time reports about messages that fail one or more email message authentication checks.
Abstract: This memo registers an extension report type for the Abuse Reporting
Format (ARF), affecting multiple registries, for use in generating
receipt-time reports about messages that fail one or more email
message authentication checks. [STANDARDS-TRACK]
TL;DR: This applicability statement describes common methods for utilizing this format for reporting both abuse and authentication failure events for mailbox Providers of any size, mail-sending entities, and end users can use these methods as a basis to create procedures that best suit them.
Abstract: RFC 5965 defines an extensible, machine-readable format intended for
mail operators to report feedback about received email to other
parties. This document describes common methods for utilizing this
format for reporting both abuse and authentication failure events.
Mailbox Providers of any size, mail sending entities, and end users
can use these methods as a basis to create procedures that best suit
them.
TL;DR: Two organizations are leading the effort to standardize reporting formats, which is essential to identifying culprits and training content-scanning engines to block similar messages.
Abstract: In the fight against spam, the immediate and efficient flow of complaint feedback directly from users to mailbox providers-the feedback loop-is essential to identifying culprits and training content-scanning engines to block similar messages. Two organizations are leading the effort to standardize reporting formats.
TL;DR: This document defines a new Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) feedback report type value: "not-spam", which can be used to report a message that was mistakenly marked as spam.
Abstract: This document defines a new Abuse Reporting Format (ARF) feedback
report type value: "not-spam". It can be used to report a message that
was mistakenly marked as spam.