Yes Mark, my visiting card carries both email address EAI and ASCII (alias). They are not two separate mailbox. In below given scenario, if the sender server do not support UTF8 then does it make sense to reply back FROM ASCII or send From EAI which in turn will convert into punnycode for recipient ?.currently by default we are sending through EAI, however user has option to change FROM to ASCII. So in fact he has to save three email address at some point of time ASCII, EAI and Punnycode. Stuart - yes SMTPAUTH via PUNNYcode has to be supported and we do support that. Today I will share the XgenPlus supported FROM and TO in SMTP protocol which every email server must support to be complaint with all kind of email clients and servers. Ajay On December 15, 2016 1:39:43 AM GMT+05:30, Mark Svancarek <marksv@microsoft.com> wrote:
Scenario:
* You give me your business card. It has an asci email address and an EAI address * I don’t know your script, so I mail to your asci address. Now your asci address is in my address book. * You reply to the mail with EAI address on the CC line. Now I have both your addresses in the address book.
I guess this is OK.
Stuart, regarding label generation rules, see IDNA2008 for the overview. file:///C:/Users/marksv/Downloads/UA006%20-%20Relevant%20RFCs[1]%20(1).pdf<file:///C:/Users/marksv/Downloads/UA006%20-%20Relevant%20RFCs%5b1%5d%20(1).pdf>
The various specific rules are script-dependent, e.g.: http://www.domainpulse.com/2015/08/25/icann-arabic-script-root-zone%E2%80%AC...
Pretty detailed stuff, but registries and registrars are obliged to understand it – not unreasonable for an email service provider to understand as well IMO.
From: Tan Tanaka, Dennis [mailto:dtantanaka@verisign.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2016 8:14 AM To: Stuart Stuple <stuartst@exchange.microsoft.com>; Ajay DATA <ajay@data.in>; Mark Svancarek <marksv@microsoft.com>; ua-eai@icann.org; don.hollander@icann.org Subject: Re: [UA-EAI] [Ext] Quick Guide to EAI
+1 Aliasing back to a ASCII email (rather than a punycode variant) is the more logical scenario
From: Stuart Stuple <stuartst@exchange.microsoft.com<mailto:stuartst@exchange.microsoft.com>> Date: Wednesday, December 14, 2016 at 9:51 AM To: Ajay DATA <ajay@data.in<mailto:ajay@data.in>>, Mark Svancarek <marksv@microsoft.com<mailto:marksv@microsoft.com>>, "ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>" <ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>>, Don Hollander <don.hollander@icann.org<mailto:don.hollander@icann.org>>, Dennis Tan Tanaka <dtantanaka@verisign.com<mailto:dtantanaka@verisign.com>> Cc: "ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>" <ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>> Subject: [EXTERNAL] RE: [UA-EAI] [Ext] Quick Guide to EAI
Aliasing back to a ASCII email (rather than a punycode variant) is the more logical scenario for large providers where the email account is not only used for the mail protocol but also authentication. While I believe that full EAI support for authentication is a goal, it should be a longer-term goal than EAI mail transport.
Mentioned below is “name label generation rules for the selected script.” Are these formalized and, if so, may I have a link to better understand the constraints being imposed?
-Stuart
From: ua-eai-bounces@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai-bounces@icann.org> [mailto:ua-eai-bounces@icann.org] On Behalf Of Ajay DATA Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2016 7:34 PM To: Mark Svancarek <marksv@microsoft.com<mailto:marksv@microsoft.com>>; ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>; don.hollander@icann.org<mailto:don.hollander@icann.org>; dtantanaka@verisign.com<mailto:dtantanaka@verisign.com> Cc: ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org> Subject: Re: [UA-EAI] [Ext] Quick Guide to EAI
Hello Mark / Don
We have addressed this issue in a different way .
While a user is getting an email account on IDN domain, he is also given an Alias email ID on english , which is attached to his IDN Email (EAI) address. This english email address can be used to even login into webmail and if any email sent to that email, it automatically lands into EAI mailbox. This was required for the basic reason as lots of clients/websites still do not support EAI and even can't be used to signup in facebook or twitter. So now user can give his alias on facebook and still use his EAI mailbox without using any other email account. This even allows user to have multiple aliases.
For example my EAI id is. अजय@डाटा.भारत<mailto:अजय@डाटा.भारत> and alias is ajay@xgenplus.com<mailto:ajay@xgenplus.com> , you can send email to any of the ID, email reaches to same mailbox retaining headers.
Happy to share more info if required.
Best regards
Ajay
On December 14, 2016 7:22:53 AM GMT+05:30, Mark Svancarek via UA-EAI <ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>> wrote: Pardon me for my very, very late feedback.
* Overall, it looks great. * I still have mixed feelings about advising to transmit the domain name portion as A-label.
* I guess I’d feel better if we suggested transmitting domain name as A-label *if* the mailbox isn’t a U-Label.
* Here’s something I thought about last week at IGF, but didn’t have time to discuss. I think we should add a section for email service provers to consider (following the section for developers to consider):
* Only offer mailbox names which conform to the domain name label generation rules for the selected script. Such names are guaranteed to be compatible with the Punycode algorithm. * These email addresses can easily be shared by users with their friends and colleagues who do not use their same writing method; the colleague or friend can address email to such an address, or create an address book entry, using the A-label format. * Upon use, the client MUA software should convert the A-Label to the appropriate U-Label, at which point the friend or colleague will possess the EAI formatted email address despite not having a keyboard or IME which supports the target script.
/marksv
From: ua-eai-bounces@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai-bounces@icann.org> [mailto:ua-eai-bounces@icann.org] On Behalf Of Don Hollander Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2016 3:27 PM To: dtantanaka@verisign.com<mailto:dtantanaka@verisign.com> Cc: ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org> Subject: Re: [UA-EAI] [Ext] Quick Guide to EAI
Thanks Dennis.
Sometimes its easier to see stuff when it’s in its final form.
Looking forward to other comments.
Don
On 14/12/2016, at 10:39 AM, Tan Tanaka, Dennis <dtantanaka@verisign.com<mailto:dtantanaka@verisign.com>> wrote:
Don,
Some comments:
1. In the example, under “username” it is suggested that “punycode” (i.e. xn--abc123) is acceptable. IMO, this is wrong. I’m almost sure the protocol doesn’t require this. 2. Same thing for second-level and top-level domains. We should not encourage software to display the A-label to end users. A-label is for the wire. Users should see only the U-label. After all , UA is about processing and displaying domain names in a proper manner. 3. EAI is about Unicode, so not sure why the “ASCII or Unicode” bullet points. This can be interpreted that ASCII-only email addresses are EAI too. 4. Since we are mentioning the idea of an authoritative list of TLDs, we should point the reader where to find one.
My two quick cents, Dennis
From: <ua-eai-bounces@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai-bounces@icann.org>> on behalf of Don Hollander <don.hollander@icann.org<mailto:don.hollander@icann.org>> Date: Tuesday, December 13, 2016 at 3:48 PM To: "ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>" <ua-eai@icann.org<mailto:ua-eai@icann.org>> Subject: [EXTERNAL] [UA-EAI] Quick Guide to EAI
Dear all:
Here’s the finished (I hope) product – Quick Guide to EAI.
Can you please review and provide comments (including endorsement) by the end of this week?
Thanks.
Don
Don Hollander Universal Acceptance Steering Group Skype: don_hollander
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