> Il 24 aprile 2019 alle 14.29 Mike Hammett <mail...@ics-il.net> ha scritto:
> 
>     I think a lot of the thought is that "everyone" uses Comcast, Google, 
> Microsoft, Yahoo, etc. for the client side and the other side of the coin is 
> Mailgun, SendGrid, Mandrill, SES, etc. The concept of there being a server 
> with a few hundred users sending a few hundred messages a day in aggregate 
> seems lost.
> 
By the way, this (or, more generally, the centralization trend through which 
small operators and self-hosted servers are increasingly kicked out of several 
major Internet services because everything only works well for big volumes) is 
increasingly seen as a problem both by regulators (in Europe, at least) and by 
many in the Internet's technical leadership. I'll take the opportunity to 
mention this workshop by the Internet Architecture Board:

https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ietf-announce/_bfpW-KxO6twNMsTk_T8PSM537g

which has an open call for papers, and which explicitly mentions email 
centralization due to antispam filters as the #1 example of the problem. 
Contributions are welcome.

Regards,

--

Vittorio Bertola | Head of Policy & Innovation, Open-Xchange
vittorio.bert...@open-xchange.com mailto:vittorio.bert...@open-xchange.com 
Office @ Via Treviso 12, 10144 Torino, Italy
_______________________________________________
mailop mailing list
mailop@mailop.org
https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop

Reply via email to