[nycphp-talk] Masking Emails and Avoiding Spam - OOPS
Jeff
jsiegel1 at optonline.net
Thu May 1 21:23:42 EDT 2003
Steve,
"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."
I believe this is the way to go.
And I should clarify one small point. He doesn't send the same job
description to 10,000 people. He sends different job descriptions to
different people based on their "specialty" areas.
As was noted in another email...my client is going to have to rethink
how he does business.
Jeff
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Manes [mailto:smanes at magpie.com]
Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2003 8:11 PM
To: NYPHP Talk
Subject: RE: [nycphp-talk] Masking Emails and Avoiding Spam - OOPS
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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