W dniu 2016-11-03 15:34, MHielder napisał(a):
UCE Protect has a very questionable reputation, foremost reason is
that they do charge money for delisting entries.
And no one knows who's behind them, since they do not publish this
kind of information. They want to stay anonymous, that's why there is
no easy way to concat them on their home page.
So you should really ask yourself: why do you trust them?
.
Ahhhh that old lie, that one has to pay to be removed again? Really?
Yes. If you are listed, which can happen if your user - for example -
makes a typo in an address and hits their honeypot, you can be forced to
either pay or get complaints from your own users as well as people they
usually mail for the next week.
Did it prevent people using UCEPROTECT within the last 15 years?
Hope so. Somehow I have never seen any respectable mail solution using
UCEPROTECT lists. (I mean confirmed by a vendor, not just UCEPROTECT
claims).
No, it didn't. The guys telling lies in the public just made fools out
of themselves.
The fact that every person interested in UCEPROTECT can go to the
website and read the removal policies should point out that delisting
will happen automatically for free after 7 days without spam.
Unless of course the super-pro crew of UCEPROTECT decides it wants to
manualy mingle with the database.
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/news.admin.net-abuse.email/oB2ZxM3Yuw0/4vfbk-pyQ90J
Otherwise it's the very pro setup with low-wage students racing to
delist so they get money.
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/news.admin.net-abuse.email/RSzPFUPYvDI/KQwlQboCM3oJ
But don't worry. I'm not going to get into another quarrel about your
money-making scheme. Don't have the time for it.
Have a nice life.
MK