Microsoft Says: Our Way Or The Spam Folder
from the how-nice dept
A year ago, we noted that it certainly looked like a standards battle was brewing concerning various email sender authentication techniques, and wondered if it was going to create some difficulties. Well, here we go. While some of the different standards did eventually merge, no real standard came out of it, so Microsoft appears to be doing what it likes to do in those situations and just ram through its own standard as if it was the default. That's why Microsoft has announced that any email not using their Sender ID system will automatically be put in the junk mail folder. In other words, Microsoft is basically making its email offerings via MSN and Hotmail a lot less useful, since a lot of perfectly legitimate email is probably going to get flagged as junk. This is the best Microsoft can do? Especially after Bill Gates said stomping out spam was his number one priority, and he thought he could do it in two years? When was that? Oh, 18 months ago. It doesn't seem like junking plenty of legitimate mail is the wonderful solution we were told to expect.
5 Comments | Leave a Comment..
- Leaked Memo Confirms Apple, Nokia & RIM Gave Indian Gov't Backdoors
- VW Will Block BlackBerry Email When People Are Off Work. Isn't That When It's Most Useful?
- Former Tunisian Regime Goes Beyond Spying On Internet Traffic... To Rewriting Emails & More
- Email Is 40 Years Old
- New US Postal Service Ad Campaign: Email Sucks, So Mail Stuff Instead





Reader Comments (rss)
(Flattened / Threaded)
non-profit members would stop recieving email
At this point, I'm investigating what it would take to notify those people to find other email solutions. It's tricky because if I send an email to them now, our ISP could construe that as SPAM and terminate our service.
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
glad glad glad
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Backfire waiting to happen . . .
Unfortunately, I don't get the impression that Hotmail, or MSN are being used by a majority or even a plurality of folks and what's more, the geeks who administer these systems generally don't like these types of tactics.
It would be really cool if a grassroots campaign sprung up and those of us who operate mail servers at ISPs just decided to stop our servers from communicating with Hotmail or MSN. Users would leave those services quite quickly if enough ISPs joined in. Oh wait, why bother? Microsoft is going to do that for us...
I think they have a higher liklihood of turning the Junk Mail folder into the new Hotmail Inbox. The ironic part is that if enough admins don't impliment Sender ID, those who did will end up having their messages sent to a folder that no hotmail or MSN user will be watching . . . The Inbox.
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
hotmail to block other domains?
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Re: hotmail to block other domains?
[ reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]
Add Your Comment