New US Postal Service Ad Campaign: Email Sucks, So Mail Stuff Instead
from the from-luddites-r-us dept
It seems the US Postal Service (USPS) is starting to get pretty desperate. Losing a ton of money, it’s apparently decided that the time is now to attack the competition. The competition, of course, is email. It’s put out two TV commercials that focus on bashing email for not being either secure or reliable:
Of course, I’m pretty sure I’ve had a lot more physical mail “lost” by human carriers than emails just disappear. And you could easily argue that regular mail isn’t particularly secure at times either. All in all, though, it seems like a bizarre commercial. Why even bother making silly assertions about email? Do they really think people are going to start saying… “gee, I can’t trust this email stuff to communicate with my friends; now I’m going to start sending real letters through the USPS!”
Filed Under: email, snail mail, usps
Comments on “New US Postal Service Ad Campaign: Email Sucks, So Mail Stuff Instead”
At least it’s not a sad letter carrier talking about how mail piracy is costing him his livelihood.
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Agreed, and asking for a law against email to save him.
Re: Re: Death and!
Or a tax/fee/license/some-such-bullshit charged for email and funneled to the USPS…
Re: Re: Re: Death and!
I’m surprised (and thankful!) that we don’t have something like that already. Sending email is like stealing from the government.
Re: Re: Re: Death and!
Thanks guys. Next thing you know the USPS is going to try all of the above. 8) (I say this only half kidding).
Am I the only one with a sudden urge to hack my fridge?
Re: Re:
http://hackaday.com/2011/10/04/effortlessly-troll-your-friends-each-time-they-reach-for-a-snack/
I also don’t have to waste time shredding emails with personal information on them before I throw them away or recycle them. There is no way that the overall physical mail process is more secure than electronic delivery or account login statements. All of my statements, which they showed in that ad, are only available through a login into the respective website.
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Probably not less secure either the way most people are ignorant of electronic informatin security. Password=password
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Are you joking? There is *no* security on emails. Absolutely none. Unless you’re encrypting your own email before you send it, anyone on the path from one mail server to another can read your mail if they want to. Not to mention the email admins at your school or business who have access to all of your email. A letter in an USPS building or truck, or your postmaster-general-approved mailbox, is protected by federal law. It is much more secure.
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“anyone on the path from one mail server to another can read your mail if they want to.”
You mean kind of like dozens of postal employees handle my mail and have the opportunity to open it? Or the way if my mailbox is full or the postal worker is confused, my mail will sometimes be left in front of my door where anyone steal it?
“Not to mention the email admins at your school or business who have access to all of your email.”
Yeap. That’s somewhat reminiscent of the way anyone at your company’s mail-room could open your physical mail if you have it delivered there.
“A letter in an USPS building or truck, or your postmaster-general-approved mailbox, is protected by federal law.”
That sort of reminds me of the way the 4th Amendment makes it illegal to read someone else’s email.
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He was saying he doesn’t have to rely on the security of the email box and transit, since all the vital information is only accessed through a secure website and not sent in an easily-intercepted email anyway.
There is one thing mail is still good for.
Sending that 4 Terabyte drive to others.
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fedex can get there faster
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They could, but if you aren’t there when they pretend to come by, they will bring it back to their office in another city and make you drive down to them to get it. Stupid fedex and their suckiness!
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Fedex are retarded. Use Puro, cheaper and they don’t leave your shipment outside your house unattended without ringing the bell …
That being said. Yes let’s all start using USPS again and wait 2-8 weeks for that damn letter. You know… old people always so that younger ones need to slow down. I guess only the USPS are paying attention.
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2-8 weeks?? I’ve yet to have USPS mail (including packages) take longer than a week. In-state mail typically takes 1 day.
The USPS hasn’t worked at the glacial pace I remember in my youth in many, many years.
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I order something from LA. It ships USPS. Not only does it take over a week to have a tracking update, but it takes roughly a month to get to me. Every single time. And we’re not talking about a 5-10lbs package. No. An envelope. A plain little envelope. Takes exactly 32 days (excluding weekends and holidays) to come here.
Yeah, I wonder if it’s not a postal guy walking from LA with my envelope. Would be faster…
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Wow, my experience is completely opposite of this. I order packages from all over the country, and rarely does it take more than a week for them to arrive once USPS has taken custody of them.
I wonder what the difference is?
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
where you live probably plays a big role
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
There is one benefit from ordering through the USPS. After reporting an SSD drive missing after 3 weeks and the USPS paying an insurance claim to the vendor because they couldn’t find it anywhere, I received the SSD few days later.
Free SSD! It just takes a month!
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Fedex in my town wont bother to deliver it. they deliver t to the post office and the post office tells me to come get it…
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>>Sending that 4 Terabyte drive to others.
If you think about it, a mail truck with a load of Netflix DVD’s has awesome bandwidth. Who needs fiber to the curb when we already have the USPS delivering to the curb? USPS FTW!
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Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway.
Maybe we should change that to USPS truck full of DVDs……
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The bandwidth is great, but the latency sucks for videogaming!
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Yeah, but the ping times are killer.
Why do we hold on to the past?
Why should there be jobs and professions no longer needed be require to be saved from change by law and education?
When did progress become a dirty word?
Re: Why do we hold on to the past?
Are you saying you want to FIRE all those postal workers? You want to DESTROY JOBS? What kind of monster ARE you?
Re: Re: Why do we hold on to the past?
They will all go postal on us…
Since 1985...
… this has been my image of the honorable local mail carrier.
Re: Since 1985...
John Cusack in 1985?! Quick, to the time machine!
we may yet stand a chance!
Safe?
How is that safe!? She’s handing over the mail directly to people! How can she know if it’s the right person?
And has everyone really gotten a nice big lock on their mailboxes nowadays?
The US Mail is not secure, or honest
As this article relates:
http://www2.nbc4i.com/news/2010/aug/19/mail-carrier-investigated-stealing-mail-ar-199726/
“Of the 623,000 postal employees and contractors across the country, last year only 446 were arrested for theft.”
“In 2009– the U.S. Postal Service Office of Inspector General completed 5,501 investigations for suspected illegal activity, including mail theft.
There were 865 convictions and more than 24 million dollars eventually paid in fines, restitutions and recoveries to the Postal Service.”
My email hasn’t ripped me off yet, although the spam tries to-but at least I can delete that.
Re: The US Mail is not secure, or honest
Still safer than the TSA.
Re: The US Mail is not secure, or honest
You’re going to have a few rotten apples in any barrel. At least the USPS prosecutes them … unlike say the NYPD.
Re: The US Mail is not secure, or honest
But you have to think that it’s not out of the question for each thief to average 10 reported thefts per person. So with 5501 investigations, 446 arrests is quite good.
New ad campaign: Mp3s are useless and unreliable. Use cassettes instead. The music you can feel.
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The music you can feel.
I spent a lot of time “feeling” said music while attempting to retrieve it from various cassette decks and return it to its rightful place upon the spools inside the cassette itself.
Good times…
[Also, VHS.]
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If Duran Duran or Pink Floyd came to my house to perform each time I wanted to listen to their music then count me in!
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C’mon.
Use Wax Cylinders. Gramaphones. Or if you’re really techy 8-track.
When I throw an email away, it doesn’t go to a landfill
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Shame on you for not recycling.
But seriously. I wonder how much energy it takes to deliver a snail-mail vs an email? Nevermind what becomes of the dead-tree medium it’s written on.
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more for dead tree, unless its nearby
Holy crap … They’re right!
So long, suckers! *disconnects internet*
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hmmm, Now I’ll have to find paper and ink and actually write my reply to Robert and then mail it to him. He should get in a few weeks.
Back in 1981...
the USPS had email, but couldn’t even do that profitably. Or with anything resembling adeptness.
“The USPS would set up a network where a message would originate electronically. It would then be sent to one of a handful of participating postal offices that had terminals, where it would be printed out. The hard copy of the message would then be delivered to its destination – essentially in the same manner and with the same speed as first class mail.”
So… like a telegraph, I suppose. Only at a loss of $5 per piece of ‘electro-mail’:
“A message was priced at 26? – and for each email message, the USPS was said to lose around $5.“
More info at this link: http://cybertelecom.blogspot.com/2011/09/us-postal-service-versus-email-historic.html
Like how the USPS had to override the FCC to get this money-losing system rolling and other such hilarity.
Talking Points
In my town in the last few weeks there was a postal worker rally for the post office. I’ve noticed that there’s a standard talking point about why the post office can’t be cut: poor people in rural areas need to get their prescription drugs by mail, and if there was no Saturday delivery they would have to wait all the way until Monday to get them.
Unless, of course, they planned ahead and ordered them one day earlier.
When I pointed this out on the news site carrying the original article, a very well prepared troll accused me of trying to cut his great aunt who didn’t like email off from the world.
So it looks like there’s a whole campaign going on to keep a bureaucracy in power, complete with astroturf protest rallies and web presence.
An online virus has never attacked a corkboard?
true, but a cumputer virus is easer to deal with then Anthrax.
It just misses that special touch.
I find trolling so much more personal when I do it by mail.
“Hate the environment. It’s overrated, anyway. Use snail mail today.”
expectation of privacy
From a legal perspective, snail mail does have a advantage when it comes to privacy. There’s serious laws against opening mail not addressed to you and law enforcement can’t expect to open people’s mail without following proper procedure.
With this kind of advertisement, the feds are acknowledging that people are using email in the place of snail mail. I would think that equating the purpose of the two would also signify an acknowledgement that citizens expectations of privacy should be equivalent as well.
Re: expectation of privacy
To push that analogy a little further:
The Gov has physical control of all mail moving thru their USPS facilities–at any time for no expressed reason mail can be scanned, opened, disappeared, etc and this is normal because everybody expects some mail to just never arrive.
Perhaps if all email went thru their facilities their wouldn’t be complaints…
Also, Senators/Congressman get “free postage” privileges, perhaps they should get “free bandwidth” equivalent privileges thru the new gov email routine (& inspection) facility…
Re: Re: expectation of privacy
Or, better yet!
Task the USPS with getting the dark fiber online, connecting strong routers, and collecting money from peering agreements with ISPs and bandwidth providers.
They can call it the “USPS Internet Backbone Service” or something like that.
There we go, funding problems solved–and they’ll still be doing the same job–packet delivery.
Re: Re: Re: expectation of privacy
…at 5-10x the cost of what private enterprise could do it for…
Abolish their government established mailbox delivery monopoly!!!
know what business you're in
E-mail is highly reliable. And the sad fact is that nobody cares about security. PGP (free and open-source) gives Fort Knox security and is quite easy to use, but just try persuading your correspondents to encrypt/decrypt e-mail with it. And don’t get me started about the legality of cryptographic signatures.
The Post Office would have been smarter to play up a quality of paper mail which can’t easily be surpassed by e-mail: charm. There is something about holding a letter in your hand, a piece of paper prepared by the hands of someone you know, with the handwriting you recognize, the tidiness or wildness, the post-scriptum crammed in at the bottom, the creases and finger-smudges, maybe the yellowing at the edges. I have a letter my grandfather wrote to my grandmother when he was stationed in London during WWII; he wrote it on the day they announced victory in Europe, and he describes the street scenes and celebrations in a youthful longhand, similar to but different from the inscriptions in some of his books from when he was an old man. In another month I’ll write a letter to a couple of my little nieces inviting them (and their parents, natch) to a Christmas party. I’ll use my favorite pen and let myself go a little with the capital letters, and maybe add a sketch or two. That’s what paper is still best at.
Re: know what business you're in
My wife and I are long distance and we use the full range of communication services, video-chat, phone, social networks, email, IM and yes, snail-mail mostly for packages. We tried USPS, but gave up on them. They take too long, their insurance service is a scam and the service is poor to mediocre. If USPS wants to be used, they should try to provide a better service.
Did they mention viruses???
Use USPS,
Because its really hard to send anthrax through the internet.
Re: Did they mention viruses???
You wouldn’t download an anthrax infected kitten, would you?
"New US Postal Service Ad Campaign: Email Sucks, So Mail Stuff Instead"
I guess this is the USPS’s marketing division’s version of: “These are not the droids your looking for”.
Thank you, USPS. I've seen the error of my ways.
Cost of a postage stamp: $0.44
Number of friends: 122
Cost of stationary: $4
The ability to file bankruptcy to keep them in contact several times per day, every day of the year: Priceless
What a failure. Next, they’ll go after Twitter in lieu of a postcard.
No Viruses through the Mail ? I thought anthrax was a Virus.
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Nope, it’s a bacteria.
Individuals versus companies
I think you missed the point a bit. These ads aren’t aimed at Joe Blow sending a love note to his girlfriend, or at a girl writing her Aunt in Nowhere, Nebraska. They’re aimed at middle managers at firms, both big and small, who don’t understand email and technology. They’re designed to remind them that paper mail is traditional, and therefore better (yeah, right), while at the same time sowing some FUD about email. One person sending an email versus a paper letter to a friend or family member won’t make or break the Post Office. One company switching all its billing to email instead of paper mail will make a measurable dent in their revenue, though.
Re: Individuals versus companies
They’re aimed at middle managers at firms, both big and small, who don’t understand email and technology.
“Print out my emails and read them back to me. I can’t risk having my account compromised. Also, wear some gloves when you read those emails. And get me some sort of personal ventilation system. God knows where those ‘electronic mails’ have been.”
e-mail sucks so mail stuff instead
The US Postal services has stated many times that they are loosing money or going bankrupt. If so, how can they afford this expensive ad compaign?
Re: e-mail sucks so mail stuff instead
They used the net, not a piece of paper in your mailbox. Huge savings.
USPS Holds Our Mail During Vacation, Keeps Holding It
http://consumerist.com/2011/10/usps-holds-our-mail-during-vacation-keeps-holding-it.html
Typical USPS timeliness
Good timing, USPS!
http://www.avc.com/a_vc/2004/11/email_is_old_fa.html
But to give them full credit, I’ll bet they are already starting to develop their anti-SMS campaign ads for rollout in 5-10 years. “Do you really trust your important messages to just go flying willy nilly through the air without even being in a sack???”
All those years ago
The USPS went wrong all those years ago when email started taking over as a main line communication. When e-mail servers started popping up all over the place, Juno, Hotmail, etc. Back then somebody should have had the smarts to get the USPS online and make it a e-mail system. That way it would have opened the door for familiarity with the USPS and kept them in the loop of mail delivery, both electronic and paper. I don’t know how many times I’ve heard complaints about how email is undercutting the USPS, well stop bitching and do something about it.
Now… it’s to little to late…. goodbye USPS
Not really
“Losing a ton of money, it’s apparently decided that the time is now to attack the competition.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNyhX6vmYcA
I don’t how long it’s going to take me to use my last 10 stamps, but if this campaign helps them stick around long enough that I don’t have to eat the loss, then more power to them!
A bit of perspective, though...
At least they’re trying to campaign to convince former users to come back — instead of trying to pass laws to force them. You know, like certain other industries prefer to do.
That could still happen, and I wouldn’t want to bet against it, but that is one bright spot about this campaign. No matter how much it sucks otherwise.
Your were spreading a myth here.
Interestingly, USPS operates at a profit. So they aren’t losing money on operations. Where they are going into the hole is due to a congressional mandate to pay 75 years worth of retirement in 5 years. Which is completely ridiculous. I’ll get you links when I can get to something other than my phone.
Re: Response to: illmunkeys on Oct 5th, 2011 @ 2:18pm
Link:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/09/29/1021133/-Republicans-Starve-The-Post-Office-Along-With-the-Rest-of-Us?via=search
Re: Response to: illmunkeys on Oct 5th, 2011 @ 2:18pm
I wrote 5 years. I meant 10.
Re: Response to: illmunkeys on Oct 5th, 2011 @ 2:18pm
To further clarify: the usps is one of the few govt entities that is self sufficient. Ie: they don’t get tax dollars. It its evidence of govt working correctly. Which makes me crack up when people claim its failing. It does more business today, due to online shopping than ever before. The _only_ reason it is failing is because of the 2006 mandate. They are funding retirement for workers not even born yet. Any company would fail with this burden.
email = environment friendly
Hypocracy
Did anyone else notice that at the end of those two ads to try and get people to stop using email and go with snail mail that you have to go online to their website to learn more about it? Kinda hypocritical if you ask me.
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At the very least, physical mail generally indicates such tampering, whereas email does not.
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You have to receive it first.
But my email client isn’t rude to me, the way the postal workers are at both the post offices near me…
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sites get hacked all of the time. email can be easily hacked. some things are better with a hardcopy
I support paper mail.
I think paper has many more merits, I actually just spent all day in circles between 2 servers, 3 different levels of spam filters and a customer trying to send some important documents to me. And the irony is as mad as i get at the USPS for misplacing something, it has happened twice in my life. E-mail does this to me monthly. Also for security, so what if you have to shred your paper, or even burn it. At least it is one copy and straight forward. The post office does not open, scan and save a copy. My mail servers, isp, senders mail server all save e-mails, Google scans it for information and in the end, you still have to shred your HDD to really get the data off of it.
Go USPS! & the other big 3 shippers for that matter.