Yes, I decided to ignore that constraint because it doesn't make sense :).
It does if you want to give the user instant feedback when they type an address that is in a valid domain but does not actually exist, as Ntrails pointed out. If you think a requirement doesn't make sense, you're supposed to ask the client, not just arbitrarily ignore it.
It does if you want to give the user instant feedback when they type an address that is in a valid domain but does not actually exist, as Ntrails pointed out. If you think a requirement doesn't make sense, you're supposed to ask the client, not just arbitrarily ignore it.