Moin,

am 20.10.22 um 01:40 schrieb Ángel via mailop:
On 2022-10-19 at 11:37 -0700, Michael Peddemors wrote:
I am not going to go into whether operating a service on the internet
is a 'right' or a 'privelege', but coming into my home sure is..
Well, precisely. Providing an address should be no issue for a company,
but requesting the home address from an individual (and by extension
from their family!) is a whole different matter.

Just feel lucky that TMG §5 (1) does not apply to you. If you run a website,
even a personal, non-AdWorded, blog, you have to put the name and address of
whoever is responsible into the imprint on that site — if you fall under the
jurisdiction of TMG.

Therefore, Deutsche Telekom's request is kind of in-line with German law …

There is a difference between letting the world know where you and your
family live and getting some nasty visitor out of it, but avoiding the
former is generally a great way for the later.

Well, running off my own IP space currently makes it hard to hide. (Although
RIPE NCC is looking into reducing information about individuals in their
whois, IIRC ...) "Feel free to visit, but remember I'm from the school of
kill first, interrogate later" ;)

Maybe they are stating to only accept email from commercial servers as
a (light) attempt to avoid GDPR issues arising from individuals.

No. As has been proven today already, the published policies
(https://postmaster.t-online.de/index.en.html#t4.1) still apply. As long
as you are able, and/or willing, to comply, they'll still whitelist you,
commercial mailhub or not.

Cheers,
-kai
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