Fight AOL/Yahoo's asinine email tax!

Started by DearAOL, Feb 28 06 03:40

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DearAOL

Fight AOL/Yahoo's asinine email tax!

[a href="http://www.dearaol.com/"]http://www.dearaol.com/[/a]

EFF has coordinated a massive effort to push back against AOL/Yahoo's proposed email tax that will only guarantee delivery of email if the sender pays AOL/Yahoo for every message they deliver:

    A pay-to-send system won't help the fight against spam - in fact, this plan assumes that spam will continue and that mass mailers will be willing to pay to have their emails bypass spam filters. And non-paying spammers will not reduce the amount of mail they throw at your filters simply because others pay to evade them.

    Perversely, the new two-tiered system AOL proposes would actually reward AOL financially for failing to maintain its email service. The chief advantage of paying to send CertifiedEmail is that it can bypass AOL's spam filters. Non-paying customers are being asked to trust that after paid mail goes into effect, AOL will properly maintain its spam filters so only unwanted mail gets thrown away.

    But the economic incentives point the other way: The moment AOL switches to a two-tiered Internet where giant emailers pay for preferential service, AOL will face a simple business choice: spend money to keep regular spam filters up-to-date, or make money by neglecting their spam filters and pushing more senders to pay for guaranteed delivery. Poor delivery of mail turns from being a problem that AOL has every incentive to fix to something that could actually make them money if the company ignores it.

Way more impressive than the letter is who signed it:

    AFL-CIO, AIDS Foundation of Chicago, American Academy of HIV Medicine, Association of Cancer Online Resources, Chris Pirillo, Lockergnome, Common Cause, Communication Workers of America, Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, Consumer Federation of America, Craig Newmark, Democracy For America, Democracy In Action, Democratic National Committee, Donor Digital, Drug Policy Alliance, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Free Press, Gun Owners of America, Human Rights Campaign, Humane Society of United States, Michael Geist, Moveon.org Civic Action, Oxfam America, Peacefire, RightMarch, RiseUp Networks, Tim O'Reilly, O'Reilly Media, United Farm Workers, Working Assets, American Rights At Work, Brothers In Action, Californians Against Waste, Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, Center for Digital Democracy, Chicago Media Action Chin Music Press, Cleanpeace.org, Connecticut Parent Power, Defenders of Wildlife, Earthjustice, Earthworks, Englewood Ob/Gyn, Equality North Carolina, Free Schuylkill River Park, Life-Zone, M+R Strategic Services, Maryland League of Conservation Voters, Media Alliance, National Video Resources, North Carolina Harm Reduction Center Prometheus Radio, Roots of Promise, Sinapu, Working America

http://www.dearaol.com/


purelife


Lisa Maree

This has to be a joke.  People would drop AOL like a sack of hot taters if they tried to tax email.  

Lisa Maree

I read up a bit more on it and unless every provider is prepared to partake in this, AOL and Yahoo are going to lose out.  What do I care if some AOLer doesn't get his or her mail?  Is AOL really hurting for cash to the point where they have to tier email?  I mean, from past experiences, I know AOLers aren't the most technically savvy bunch but a few of them have to clue on that maybe it's time to give AOL the ole boot and make the switch.  Gmail anyone?

TehBorken

 This is legit, AOL has been doing this and expanding this for some time now. I've posted something on this before I believe.

Wake up people- the "Powers That Be" really want to squeeze every last nickel out of you and this here intarweb thing. The "preferred sender" list is just another move by AOL to reap some bucks and others will follow suit if they succeed. It's in your own best interests to fight this thing. If you don't, by the time you realize you've been f*cked it'll be too late.

This disciminates against non-profit groups, and anyone with a limited budget. Clubs, organizations, social groups, etc will all find themselves unable to reliably send email to any AOL customer, friend, or associate. That means YOU, whether you're sending or receiving it.
 
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