OFF TOPIC: email postage should be of interest to those who use OSS newslists - Mailing list pgsql-jdbc
From | David Wall |
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Subject | OFF TOPIC: email postage should be of interest to those who use OSS newslists |
Date | |
Msg-id | 02a001c3e9d3$b0dc1350$3201a8c0@rasta Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Encoding nightmare! Pls help! ("John Sidney-Woollett" <johnsw@wardbrook.com>) |
List | pgsql-jdbc |
Sorry for this off topic posting, but it should be of interest to those in the OSS communities since it threatens us. The following story appeared in the New York Times as well as various local papers (like the one here in Seattle). http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/02/technology/02spam.html The gist is that Microsoft, Yahoo and others are trying to create a scam in which they charge postage for email. Note that this would be used against all open source projects that rely heavily on free emails going out to developers and users. Note that spam filters in the big ISPs will only be made more restrictive in order to increase utilization of the postage scam. After all, nearly every email sent arrives at its destination today, so nobody will pay. But as they tighten the rules, more legit email will get blocked as spam, thus forcing us into paying for postage that provides no added services, and of course would cripple OSS projects that rely on email. Below is my letter to the editor of the NYT and a few quotes from the article for those who aren't registered on the NYT site. Thanks, David ++++ Re: "Gates Backs E-Mail Stamp in War on Spam," http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/02/technology/02spam.html Dear Mr. Hansell: Postage for sending email? That sounds like a greedy attempt to charge twice without providing any added services. Our tax dollars paid to create the Internet and the communications protocols freely used by Microsoft and Yahoo. But now there's a new land grab to try to privatize our public, worldwide network that promotes freedom. Our monthly ISP and telephone fees already pay for our usage of the Internet. Now we're told that for our own good, we should pay for each email sent, even though we've already paid for that privilege. Open source projects rely heavily on email for developer communications and for user support. Is it surprising that Microsoft likes such a scheme? Will we next have to pay for each instant message or each web page we visit? A typical email, like this one, is about 2 KB in size. Today's MSN homepage is 100 KB, with lots of unsolicited ads. Unsolicited popup ads often run in the 13-20KB range. Should Microsoft have to pay me to view these ads? Their web page consumes 50 times more bandwidth than this email. Lastly, there are commercials services today like Yozons.com that charge for sending secure messages that have no spam or viruses, but at least they offer lots of features beyond email (working return receipts, encrypted delivery to ensure privacy, electronic signatures, status tracking of messages sent, etc.) so many find it worth the extra money spent. We'll pay for services we want, but paying twice for no added service is bad all around. Sincerely, David Wall +++++ Some quotes from the NYT story, since I realize I cannot post the entire story here for copyright reasons: "Ten days ago, Bill Gates, Microsoft's chairman, told the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that spam would not be a problem in two years, in part because of systems that would require people to pay money to send e-mail. Yahoo, meanwhile, is quietly evaluating an e-mail postage plan being developed by Goodmail, a Silicon Valley start-up company." ""Damn if I will pay postage for my nice list," said David Farber, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University, who runs a mailing list on technology and policy with 30,000 recipients. He said electronic postage systems are likely to be too complex and would charge noncommercial users who should be able to send e-mail free." "But for the big Internet access providers, or I.S.P.'s, the prospect of e-mail postage creating a new revenue stream that could help offset the cost of their e-mail systems is undeniably attractive"
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