[nycphp-talk] Masking Emails and Avoiding Spam - OOPS
Steve Manes
smanes at magpie.com
Thu May 1 21:10:57 EDT 2003
At 07:52 PM 5/1/2003 -0400, Jeff wrote:
>The point is that my client is panicking. He's worried he'll be put out
>of business now that AOL, MSN, et al., are talking about ways to deal
>with spam.
>
>I'm interested to hear what others may think about this particular
>situation.
He has every right to panic because they're not just talking. In the case
of AOL, they're already doing. I've forgotten the formula I saw a couple
of weeks ago but if you send X emails to non-existent/expired AOL accounts
in X days, you're automatically blackholed. Worse, your mail will just
disappear into the bit bucket without a bounce.
I know what the "official" definition is, but I don't think spam is
unsolicited commercial email. It's unsolicited, unwanted bulk email. It's
a lot like pornography: you know it when you see it. If I was out of work,
living on ramen and water, and I landed a job because I was on that
headhunter's list, I'd have a very different opinion of those mailings than
someone who was happily employed at 3x the salary offered.
I've gotten lots of spam that wasn't commercial, like chain letters
demanding that I send a bunch of copies to my annoyed friends, political
demands that I Bitch To Bush and the "prayer for the day" crap I used to
get a couple of years ago. Virus email is probably the most evil form of
spam even though there's rarely a commercial purpose to it. By the same
token, the service advisories that Watchguard sends its customers and which
I never opted into are both bulk and commercial, yet they contain
information that I want.
Your friend is probably going to have to make some adjustments. Sending a
single job description out to 10,000 people is excessive. I think he might
want to trickle out some "re-opt" emails to his subscribers and in the
future send email only to those who respond affirmatively.
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