On 12 Jul 2019, at 15:06, John R. Levine wrote:
Please find attached a recent study undertaken on the request of UASG on the Global Evaluation of Websites for Acceptance of E-mail Addresses 2019, for your review and feedback. Please send your feedback on ua-discuss@icann.org<mailto:ua-discuss@icann.org> list (visit https://uasg.tech/subscribe to subscribe) by 29 July. We look forward to your input.
As I understand it, the tests checked whether a web form accepted an address, but it didn't check whether the site could actually send mail to that address. There's a lot of places where EAI mail can fail between the browser and the recipient's MTA, so the report should make it clear that the percentages reported are an upper bound, with the actual numbers likely being somewhat less.
agreed. I wrote similarly in a email sent almost at the same time as yours.
With respect to the HTML5 pattern for e-mail addresses, I have talked to people in WHATWG about it. That pattern is correct for ASCII addresses and it's not going to change to an EAI pattern because that would lead to web sites with ASCII mail systems accepting addresses to which they can't send mail. They would be open to adding a new "eaimail" input type that accepts EAI addresses, to allow an easy upgrade when sites have EAI capable back ends.
Nothing is going to happen in WHATWG until one of their large members says they'll implement it which hasn't happened. I've made some inquiries and gotten polite responses, but I can't do much more since I have no funding.
from https://w3c.github.io/test-results/html53/implementation-report.html, done back in september, Firefox seems to support, while others were not tested. Marc.
Regards, John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly
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