I also reached out to them on Twitter but they directed me to this form. I followed up with them on Twitter with what happened in this screenshot but they are now ignoring me.

    • @MeatsOfRage
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      411 year ago

      Exactly. After the @ they should just confirm there’s at least one period. The rest is pretty much up in the air.

      • @deafboy
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        331 year ago

        Which would still be technically wrong. There does not need to be a dot.

      • Trailblazing Braille Taser
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        231 year ago

        Even that would be technically incorrect. I believe you could put an A record on a TLD if you wanted. In theory, my email could be me@example.

        Another hole to poke in the single dot regex: I could put in fake@com. with a dot trailing after the TLD, which would satisfy “dot after @” but is not an address to my knowledge.

        • @douglasg14b
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          121 year ago

          And this sort of thing is exactly how you end up with bad regex that invalidates valid emails.

          The point isn’t to invalidate all bad emails. It’s to sort out most of them.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          Something something http://[2607:f8b0:4004:c09::8a] and http://3627734062 are valid url’s without a dot, and are probably valid for emails too, but I’m too lazy to actually verify that.

      • @[email protected]
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        131 year ago

        I’ve had issues with this in using govt emails too. DOD accounts all have multiple dots based on branch and dept. It broke so many systems and emails never went through.

      • @Aux
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        81 year ago

        The easiest and most correct check: any character, then @, then any other character.