The above situation is acting like a pseudo-2nd-gen email standard that's evolving in slow motion (without us officially calling it "gen v2.0"). Those email policy changes will be adopted because big cloud email providers like Gmail and Yahoo have a massive influence on the entire email landscape.
Therefore, a new hypothetical "MX2" standard that was more coherent with better authentication, anti-spam, and anti-phishing features could be promoted by a consortium of Google/Microsoft/Yahoo/Apple. The smaller players like Fastmail, ProtonMail, Mailchimp, Sendgrid, etc and most everyone else would all have to follow the cloud email providers' lead because everybody wants to be able to send email to them.
The key argument is that email is already getting "2nd-gen'd" -- but it's happening in bite-sized and incoherent steps that don't fully work.
Example of new 2024 DMARC/DKIM/SPF requirements from Google & Yahoo: https://www.google.com/search?q=yahoo+gmail+new+senders+dkim...
The above situation is acting like a pseudo-2nd-gen email standard that's evolving in slow motion (without us officially calling it "gen v2.0"). Those email policy changes will be adopted because big cloud email providers like Gmail and Yahoo have a massive influence on the entire email landscape.
Therefore, a new hypothetical "MX2" standard that was more coherent with better authentication, anti-spam, and anti-phishing features could be promoted by a consortium of Google/Microsoft/Yahoo/Apple. The smaller players like Fastmail, ProtonMail, Mailchimp, Sendgrid, etc and most everyone else would all have to follow the cloud email providers' lead because everybody wants to be able to send email to them.