Every few months Microsoft blocks our server. We then have to go through the tiresome process of making a delisting request, waiting for the email from Outlook support saying, 'Nothing was detected to prevent your mail from reaching Outlook.com customers', responding to that email to say that our server is still blocked, then waiting for them to delist the server. If I ask them why they blocked us (which I've given up doing now), I get the same response every time: 'we do not have the liberty to discuss the nature of the block'. Needless to say, I'm over it.
Anyone else having a similarly painful experience? I have to assume it's a fairly common experience, because between our delisting requests in November and March, our Outlook.com case numbers incremented by 9,393,678. That's over 9 million support requests in 4 months. I'm not saying they were all delisting requests, but people don't fill out a deliverability support form for fun.
I found this discussion from 2020, which talks about mail going to spam for recipients with Microsoft (Outlook, Hotmail and MSN) email accounts. In that thread, the focus was on working with the very nice and helpful people at Microsoft to get delisted—celebration! That's fine if it happens once. When it happens over and over and over again, one grows a little more cranky and cynical.
I also found this discussion on the Outlook forum. One user noticed that Microsoft is mangling the signed headers, causing DKIM to fail. Like others, I too have noticed that some Microsoft DMARC reports show DKIM failure, whereas reports from other mail providers pass DKIM every time.
Admittedly, I'm no expert, so I'm hoping someone else can shed more light on this. Are we wrong to conclude that Microsoft is just incompetent when it comes to mail authentication and is repeatedly blacklisting correctly configured and well behaved mail servers for no good reason at all?
Anyone else having a similarly painful experience? I have to assume it's a fairly common experience, because between our delisting requests in November and March, our Outlook.com case numbers incremented by 9,393,678. That's over 9 million support requests in 4 months. I'm not saying they were all delisting requests, but people don't fill out a deliverability support form for fun.
I found this discussion from 2020, which talks about mail going to spam for recipients with Microsoft (Outlook, Hotmail and MSN) email accounts. In that thread, the focus was on working with the very nice and helpful people at Microsoft to get delisted—celebration! That's fine if it happens once. When it happens over and over and over again, one grows a little more cranky and cynical.
I also found this discussion on the Outlook forum. One user noticed that Microsoft is mangling the signed headers, causing DKIM to fail. Like others, I too have noticed that some Microsoft DMARC reports show DKIM failure, whereas reports from other mail providers pass DKIM every time.
Admittedly, I'm no expert, so I'm hoping someone else can shed more light on this. Are we wrong to conclude that Microsoft is just incompetent when it comes to mail authentication and is repeatedly blacklisting correctly configured and well behaved mail servers for no good reason at all?