![]() ![]() This dig command resulted in no ANSWER SECTION, leading me to believe that the CNAME value was not added. Please see the following dig command: % dig protonmail._ The original CNAME record I was trying to create, which is required by ProtonMail, is protonmail._domainkey. It uses end-to-end encryption to secure ones own appointments, and zero-knowledge. Up to 10 email addresses and support for one custom domain 15GB of storage Access to the short domain pm.me to send and receive email Unlimited organization (folders and labels) Ability to open your ProtonMail account on a different email client (e.g. Additional features Tutanota Tutanota has an autoresponder, custom domain. Proton Calendar is a secure calendar app that helps protect ones schedule. The above output indicated that the DNS record was saved successfully. Proton Mail ProtonMail Proton Mail is the worlds largest secure email. I believe there is a bug in Netlify with CNAME records containing a period (which is entirely valid in DNS).Īs a proof of concept, I’ve created two CNAME records. I recently got a notification from ProtonMail saying that everything about the DNS configuration is correct, except for the DKIM values. However, the original poster (and consequently, the support engineer) misrepresented the core issue of what is happening. ![]() ![]() In my research regarding this issue, I found this forum post which is exactly the same issue I am facing. Both allow users to use their own email domain to create a custom email. Its just as secure as it is with a Protonmail domain. I am using ProtonMail for email, and I moved over the DNS records for ProtonMail from Namecheap to Netlify. It also enables you to send encrypted messages to non-ProtonMail recipients, and to use three custom email domains, and includes unlimited folders. Both Proton Mail and Tutanota offer end-to-end encryption for all emails. I am using Netlify as my custom DNS provider. ![]()
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