this post was submitted on 12 Feb 2026
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I had a company I was doing business with reject a valid email address of mine because it contained a "." character in it. I got an error message about this being invalid email address to use. My "first.last@emailprovider.com" address had no problems sending/receiving emails with anyone else.
There should be some simplified standard way to identify what combination of email configuration is/isn't supported by companies and email providers. This can also future proof against future changes in email configuration changing over time due to the ongoing fight against spam.
There's already a standard that defines what is an acceptable email address. And an standard reply for a rejected email address.
The issue is you're dealing with a misconfigured or inappropriate email stack.
Yep. This happens when some idiot tries to roll their own regex. I've also seen them frequently reject my+email@domain
Email address regex: '.+.+'
Joke, here's some reading on it. Basically, E-Mail address can have almost any form and you better use a library that doesn't use regexp parsing.