DKIM, which is an acronym for DomainKeys Identified Mail, is an email validation system, which hinders email headers from being spoofed and email content from being meddled with. This is achieved by attaching an electronic signature to each and every email sent from an address under a certain domain name. The signature is issued based on a private cryptographic key that is available on the outbound SMTP email server and it can be validated using a public key, which is available in the global DNS database. In this way, any email message with modified content or a forged sender can be spotted by mail service providers. This method will heighten your web safety substantially and you will know for sure that any email sent from a business collaborator, a bank, and so on, is authentic. When you send out email messages, the recipient will also be sure that you are indeed the one who has sent them. Any email that appears to be fake may either be flagged as such or may never be delivered to the receiver’s mailbox, depending on how the particular provider has decided to deal with such emails.

DomainKeys Identified Mail in Shared Website Hosting

You will be able to take advantage of DomainKeys Identified Mail with each Linux shared website hosting packages that we’re offering without the need to do anything in particular, as the compulsory records for using this email validation system are created automatically by our web hosting platform when you add a domain to an existing hosting account through the Hepsia Control Panel. As long as the domain name in question uses our NS records, a private key will be issued and kept on our mail servers and a TXT record with a public key will be sent to the global DNS database. In case you send out regular email messages to customers or business collaborators, they’ll always be delivered and no unsolicited individual will be able to spoof your address and make it look like you have composed a certain message.