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Email Authentication Report for uber.com

A live look at how uber.com configures SPF, DKIM, DMARC, and transport security, with the grade explained.

A

uber.com

90 out of 100

Scanned: Jul 6, 2026, 1:16 PM

Why this score

The score starts at 100. Every issue below subtracts points based on how much it hurts your deliverability or lets someone spoof you.

Starting score
100
SPFEnds with ~all (softfail).
-5
DMARCPolicy is p=quarantine.
-5
Your score
90
  • SPF

    -5Pass
    • -5

      Ends with ~all (softfail).

      A softfail asks receivers to accept mail from unlisted senders but flag it, so spoofed messages can still reach the inbox.

      How to fix: Move to -all after confirming that all of your senders are included, so unauthorized mail is rejected.

    DNS lookups7 / 10
    v=spf1 include:uber.com._nspf.vali.email include:%{i}._ip.%{h}._ehlo.%{d}._spf.vali.email include:mailgun.org ~all
    allQualifier
    ~
  • DKIM

    Pass
    • DKIM is set up (14 valid selector(s) found).

      At least one valid signing key was found, so your outgoing mail can be signed and verified by receivers.

    selectors
    google, s1, s2, k1, k2, k3, smtp, mandrill, mte1, smtpapi, zendesk1, zendesk2, hs1, hs2
    keyType
    rsa
    keyBits
    2048
  • DMARC

    -5Pass
    • -5

      Policy is p=quarantine.

      Quarantine sends failing mail to the spam folder rather than rejecting it. That is good protection, but not the strongest.

      How to fix: Advance to p=reject once you are confident that every legitimate source passes.

    • Aggregate reporting is enabled.

      A rua address is set, so you receive daily reports showing every source that sends as your domain.

    • DMARC is present and enforced.

      A valid DMARC record was found with an enforcing policy, so receivers act on mail that fails authentication.

    v=DMARC1; p=quarantine; rua=mailto:dmarc_agg@vali.email
    policy
    quarantine
    subdomainPolicy
    quarantine
    pct
    100
    rua
    mailto:dmarc_agg@vali.email
    adkim
    r
    aspf
    r
  • MX

    Pass
    • MX is configured (5 mail server(s)).

      Your domain has MX records and every listed mail server resolves to an IP address, so it can receive mail.

    mxHosts
    aspmx.l.google.com (2), alt2.aspmx.l.google.com (5), alt1.aspmx.l.google.com (5), alt3.aspmx.l.google.com (10), alt4.aspmx.l.google.com (10)
    mxCount
    5
  • Blacklist

    Pass
    • Not on any checked blocklist.

      Your mail server IPs were not found on the public blocklists we checked. Reputation can change, so it is worth monitoring over time.

    ipsChecked
    192.178.158.26, 172.253.158.27, 108.177.125.26
    blocklists
    bl.spamcop.net, dnsbl.sorbs.net

Optional enhancements

Advanced, nice-to-have features. Setting these up (or not) does not change your grade.

  • DNSSEC

    Optional
    • DNSSEC is not enabled.

      DNSSEC is optional, but it protects against DNS spoofing by letting resolvers confirm your records are authentic. Most domains still do not use it.

      How to fix: If your DNS provider and registrar support it, enable DNSSEC to protect your domain from DNS tampering.

  • MTA-STS

    Optional
    • MTA-STS is not set up.

      MTA-STS is optional but recommended. It tells sending servers to require TLS when delivering mail to you, which blocks downgrade and man-in-the-middle attacks on your inbound mail.

      How to fix: Publish a _mta-sts TXT record and host a policy at https://mta-sts.<yourdomain>/.well-known/mta-sts.txt with mode enforce.

    Read the MTA-STS guide
  • TLS-RPT

    Optional
    • TLS reporting (TLS-RPT) is not set up.

      TLS-RPT is optional. It asks receivers to send you reports when TLS fails while delivering your mail, which is how you catch MTA-STS or certificate problems before they hurt delivery.

      How to fix: Publish a _smtp._tls TXT record with v=TLSRPTv1 and a rua address, for example rua=mailto:tlsrpt@yourdomain.

    Read the TLS-RPT guide
  • BIMI

    Optional
    • BIMI has no Verified Mark Certificate.

      Your BIMI record has no a= (VMC) tag. Gmail and Apple Mail require a VMC to show your logo, so those inboxes will not display it even though the record is otherwise valid.

      How to fix: Obtain a Verified Mark Certificate for your trademark and add it with the a= tag to reach Gmail and Apple Mail.

    v=BIMI1; l=https://amplify.valimail.com/bimi/uber/WSc5-ZpWcvs-uber_tinyps_v4.svg; a=
    logo
    https://amplify.valimail.com/bimi/uber/WSc5-ZpWcvs-uber_tinyps_v4.svg
    vmc
    Read the BIMI guide

This report shows how uber.com configures email authentication in its public DNS. Consumer brands send order confirmations, receipts, and marketing at scale, and these records decide how much of that mail reaches the inbox instead of the spam folder.

How to read the grade

Everything above is computed live from the records uber.com publishes right now. A strong result means SPF authorizes the correct senders, DKIM signs outgoing mail with a valid key, and DMARC sets a policy that instructs receivers on how to handle failures. Where a check is weak, the report shows the exact record involved so the gap is easy to understand.

About this report

This report is generated from publicly available DNS records for uber.com and is provided for informational and educational purposes only. SPFWise is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the owner of uber.com. The records shown are the same ones any mail server can query, and the grade updates automatically as they change.

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