This report looks at the email authentication posture of dropbox.com as it appears in public DNS today. Software platforms send a constant stream of transactional mail, so the records that prove those messages are genuine directly affect whether customers receive them.
What this report checks
The grade above is derived directly from what dropbox.com publishes in DNS, so it reflects the domain exactly as a receiving mail server sees it. SPF lists the servers allowed to send on the domain's behalf. DKIM adds a cryptographic signature that proves a message was not altered in transit. DMARC ties the two together and tells receivers what to do when a message fails both checks. Transport records such as MTA-STS and TLS-RPT add a further layer by protecting the connection itself.
About this report
This report is generated from publicly available DNS records for dropbox.com and is provided for informational and educational purposes only. SPFWise is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the owner of dropbox.com. The records shown are the same ones any mail server can query, and the grade updates automatically as they change.
Want the same breakdown for your own domain? Run a free scan to get an identical grade along with the exact records to fix anything that is weak.