On Wed, 19 Aug 2020, Murray S. Kucherawy wrote:
If this only interfered with Ericsson's users, I might agree. But it
recklessly interferes with third parties. To me, that's significant.
Right.
Yup. They want phishes, or in Yahoo's case expensive user complaints, to
go away, they don't care about discussion lists one way or the other
Perhaps they would care if users/customers complained and or walked.
Again, just saying.
Sheesh, we went through this a decade ago. Approximately none of AOL or
Yahoo's mail users pay for the service -- they're the product, not the
customer. I know a fair number of people with AOL accounts, they're not
super thrilled about AOL, but the cost of switching and telling all of
their correspondents is huge.
It is abundantly clear that Ericsson and AOL and Yahoo do not object to
their users sending mail through discussion lists. Ericsson doesn't want
their execs to be phished, AOLhoo doesn't want complaints "why am I
getting spam from people I know." In each case we know from experience
that their published p=reject doesn't describe their actual policy.
Regards,
John Levine, [email protected], Taughannock Networks, Trumansburg NY
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. https://jl.ly
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