I also reached out to them on Twitter but they directed me to this form. I followed up with them on Twitter with what happened in this screenshot but they are now ignoring me.

  • @jwt@programming.dev
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    647 months ago

    Probably, from what I can see the address in question isn’t really that exotic. but an email regex that validates 100% correctly is near impossible. And then you still don’t know if the email address actually exists.

    I’d just take the user at their word and send an email with an activation link to the address that was supplied. If the address is invalid, the mail won’t get delivered. No harm done.

    • @Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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      177 months ago

      Actually, one of our customers found out the hard way that there is harm in sending emails to invalid addresses. Too many kickbacks and cloud services think you’re a bot. Prevented the customer from being able to send emails for 24 hours.

      This is the result of them “requiring” an email for customers but entering a fake one if they didn’t want to provide their email, and then trying to send out an email to everyone.

      Our software has an option to disable that requirement but they didn’t want to use it because they wanted their staff to remember to ask for an email address. It was not a great setup but they only had themselves to blame.

      • @jwt@programming.dev
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        147 months ago

        My guess is that would also occur with valid but non-existing e-mail addresses no? The regex would not be a remedy there anyway.

        Of course you should only use the supplied e-mail address for things like mass mailings once it has been verified (i.e. the activation link from within the mail was clicked)

        • @Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          That’s exactly what they did. They used something like noaddress@ourbusniess.com to get around the checks we had in place. I’ve intentionally been vague but most people will give their email address to our customers and won’t give a fake one. So under normal situations the amount of bounce backs would be minimal: fat fingering, hearing them incorrectly, or people misremembering their email. Not enough to worry about. Never thought we’d come across a customer intentionally putting in bad email addresses for documentation purposes. They could have just asked us to make the functionality they wanted.

    • Echo Dot
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      167 months ago

      The best of validation is just to confirm that the email contains a @ and a . and if it does send it an email with a confirmation link.

      • @__dev@lemmy.world
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        257 months ago

        TLDs are valid in emails, as are IP V6 addresses, so checking for a . is technically not correct. For example a@b and a@[IPv6:2001:db8::1] are both valid email addresses.

        • @HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz
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          157 months ago

          I feel like using a@[IPv6:2001:db8::1] is asking for trouble everywhere online.

          But its tempting to try out, not many people would expect this.

          • Crass Spektakel
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            -17 months ago

            try user@123.45.67.89.in-addr.arpa or user@d.e.a.d.b.e.e.f.0.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.a.b.c.d.e.f.0.0.0.0.1.2.3.4.ip6.arpa just for the giggles. Mix it with BANG-Adressing:

            123.45.67.89.in-addr.arpa!d.e.a.d.b.e.e.f.0.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.a.b.c.d.e.f.0.0.0.0.1.2.3.4.ip6.arpa!user

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        267 months ago

        Personally I don’t think that sucks or is even wrong. Case-independent text processing is more cumbersome. ‘U’ and ‘u’ are two different symbols. And you have to make such rules for every language a part of your processing logic.

        If people can take case-dependence for passwords (or official letters and their school papers), then it’s also fine for email addresses.

        The actual problem is cultural, coming from DOS and Windows where many things are case-independent. It’s an acquired taste.

        • @Redredme@lemmy.world
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          127 months ago

          Im with the earlier “yeah… No.”

          Because

          “If people can take case-dependence for passwords”

          They cant now do they ? If they could passwords would be a-okay and there wouldn’t be any need for stickies on monitors, password managers, biometrics, SSO, MFA and passwordless authentication.

          The dumbest idea in computing is assuming everyone is as smart as you.

          They aren’t. Why isn’t *nix any bigger? Here’s your answer. People are stupid.

          Why did IT only finally took off with windows 3.11? because people could understand that. Barely. Most of us where way to dumb for everything which came before.

          Why does ipv6 acception takes so long? Because people are stupid and don’t get it. Nobody really gets hex. So they just stay with what they can read and more or less get. Even the hardest part of ip4, subnetting, has an easy way out: just add 255.255.255.0 in there and it works. Doesnt work? Keep replacing 255 with zeros and eventually it will. Subnetting on ipv6? No idea. Let’s just disable ipv6 on the internal lan and leave everything on ipv4. Zero migration, zero risk, zero training needed.

          Why do so many companies only go half assed into cloud? Because they don’t get it.

          Powershell? Only half, a third even, of the admins truly get it.

          I could go on.

          Succes is build on simplicity.

          • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            27 months ago

            Oh, I like writing such rants too, so I’ll answer with lots of words.

            They cant now do they ? If they could passwords would be a-okay and there wouldn’t be any need for stickies on monitors, password managers, biometrics, SSO, MFA and passwordless authentication.

            Hardware tokens. With sufficient demand the scale would make them really cheap.

            It’s exactly because of having experience with making work the whole zoo that engineers don’t understand how much easier that would be for normies.

            The dumbest idea in computing is assuming everyone is as smart as you.

            Assuming that everyone is as dumb as me in areas where I’m dumb would also be a mistake.

            Why isn’t *nix any bigger? Here’s your answer. People are stupid.

            Because of oligopoly. People are not stupid, but they have priorities and they don’t have some of the knowledge we have. Also it doesn’t really have to be that big immediately, all in good time.

            Why did IT only finally took off with windows 3.11? because people could understand that. Barely. Most of us where way to dumb for everything which came before.

            Can’t comment on that, I was born in 1996.

            Why does ipv6 acception takes so long? Because people are stupid and don’t get it. Nobody really gets hex. So they just stay with what they can read and more or less get. Even the hardest part of ip4, subnetting, has an easy way out: just add 255.255.255.0 in there and it works. Doesnt work? Keep replacing 255 with zeros and eventually it will. Subnetting on ipv6? No idea. Let’s just disable ipv6 on the internal lan and leave everything on ipv4. Zero migration, zero risk, zero training needed.

            Because not everything supports it right, including some industrial equipment and network hardware, there may be new bugs in everything involved, the old ways work and it’s not just v4 with longer address, so people fear making mistakes in configuration.

            Why do so many companies only go half assed into cloud? Because they don’t get it.

            Now think about similar horrors in, say, piping in houses, or other construction stuff. Or cars. Or roads. Everything is half-assed. It’s normal.

            Powershell? Only half, a third even, of the admins truly get it.

            I kinda get it, but also hate it. Hard to read.

            In general:

            The most precious secret you can get from experience is that people are not stupid when they are given easy opportunity to try many things and choose what they like.

        • @dan@upvote.au
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          7 months ago

          ‘U’ and ‘u’ are two different symbols. And you have to make such rules for every language a part of your processing logic.

          Unicode has standard rules for case folding, which includes the rules for all languages supported by Unicode. Case-insensitive comparisons in all good programming languages uses this data.

          Note that you can’t simply convert both strings to uppercase or lowercase to compare them, as then you’ll run into the Turkish i problem: https://haacked.com/archive/2012/07/05/turkish-i-problem-and-why-you-should-care.aspx/

          • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            47 months ago

            So good that we all use Unicode now. No CP1251, no ISO single-byte encodings, no Japanese encoding hell.

            • lad
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              17 months ago

              Yeah, living in 2123 sure is good

          • @labsin@sh.itjust.works
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            17 months ago

            It’s that capitalization is language dependent, which email addresses shouldn’t be as I hope the rules for France shouldn’t be different than for Dutch. For instance é in Dutch is capitalized as E, but in French it is É. The eszett didn’t even have an official capital before 2017

            In most programming languages, case-insensitive string compare without specifying the culture became deprecated. It should imo only be used for fuzzy searching doubles, which you probably will do with ToUpper on all four performance reasons, or maybe some UI validation.

      • @PoolloverNathan@programming.dev
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        17 months ago

        TLDs could theoretically have MX records too! Email addresses as specified also support IPv6 addresses! The regex would need to be .+@.+ and at this point it’s probably easier to just send an email.

        • JackbyDev
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          27 months ago

          I’m with you, and I agree that is technically correct, but I believe the sheer number of people who might accidentally write “gmail” instead of “gmail.com” compared to people using an IPv6 address (seems like a spam bot) or using a TLD like “admin@com” make requiring the dot worthwhile.

          • @PoolloverNathan@programming.dev
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            7 months ago

            That’s why I have an “allow anyway” button for addresses that look misspelled but are still technically valid.

            Edit: believe it or not, that was a typo.