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    <title>DMARC on Kestrel&#39;s Nest</title>
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      <title>Anatomy of a Support Inbox</title>
      <link>https://blog.kestrelsnest.social/posts/2026-05-30-anatomy-of-a-support-inbox/</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <description>&lt;div class=&#34;callout callout-info&#34;&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;callout-title&#34;&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span class=&#34;callout-icon&#34;&gt;ℹ️&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;    &lt;span&gt;TL;DR&lt;/span&gt;&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;  &lt;div class=&#34;callout-content&#34;&gt;&#xA;    One email address, &lt;code&gt;support@locallygrown.net&lt;/code&gt;, quietly turned into a pipeline that reads, sorts, and drafts replies before I ever see a message: it skips the noise, runs a spam gate that &lt;em&gt;fails open&lt;/em&gt;, untangles forwarded threads to find the real sender, figures out which market they belong to (with a plain-English database as backup), and hands the whole thing to &lt;strong&gt;Sage&lt;/strong&gt;, the same expert agent my market managers already trust. A recent branch even watches DMARC reports for anyone sending mail &lt;em&gt;as me&lt;/em&gt; — and caught a &amp;ldquo;forger&amp;rdquo; that turned out to be a customer&amp;rsquo;s security scanner. Every stage ends in a human decision, on purpose. The machine reads and drafts; I decide.&#xA;  &lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;/div&gt;&#xA;&lt;p&gt;For years, &lt;code&gt;support@locallygrown.net&lt;/code&gt; was just an inbox I dreaded. Mail came in — a grower who couldn&amp;rsquo;t log in, a customer whose eggs never showed up at pickup, a market manager with a policy question, and in between all of it, an unrelenting drizzle of SEO pitches and &amp;ldquo;I noticed your website could rank higher.&amp;rdquo; Every message was a context switch, and most of them weren&amp;rsquo;t even for me.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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