Because I've been using Tencent Enterprise Mail, I've been receiving a lot of emails reminding me about the "real-name registration policy," which has left me completely confused. The email is as follows:
At first glance, it seems that without real-name registration, the email function can no longer be used, but there's no explanation on how to register. Based on this, I logged into the corporate email backend to try and see if there was any other information.
Once inside, I found nothing special, except for a notification message. Based on what was written in the message, I seemed to understand what was going on.
After some searching and careful reading, I found this was related to domain registration. What does that mean? It means that you need to have your domain registered with your domain registrar verified by your real name. In other words, you need to register your domain with your real name. But here's the problem: what about people like me who register most of their domains with providers outside of China? I contacted GoDaddy and name.com, and their customer service representatives both said they were unaware of this and couldn't perform real-name authentication. Therefore, I made a bold guess and conclusion:
- Real-name verification is only required for domain registrars registered in China. If you registered your domain in China, you need to log in to the registrar's website, click on the link, and submit your real-name verification request.
- If the domain registrar fails to approve the domain, the domain registrar will stop DNS resolution (the domain will become unusable).
- This has nothing to do with corporate email. As long as the domain name resolves correctly, corporate email will work normally.
- Domain name authentication and filing are completely unrelated. Even if you file, you still need to complete real-name authentication (the government has too much money and wants to do something).
June 15th is the deadline; let's observe and verify our guesses then!
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Original author:Jake Tao,source:What exactly is the status of the domain name real-name registration policy?

Comments list (2 items)
That makes a lot of sense; I'm even planning to set up my own post office.
@Echowxsy :Self-built firewalls are prone to failing to bypass them.