AOL Tries To Defend Their Spam Flag On Emergency Emails
from the no-return-address? dept
Following yesterday's well-publicized story about AOL blocking emergency alert emails as spam in Florida, the company has responded by blaming the group that put out the alerts. While they've put the emergency alerts on a whitelist, they also defended the reasons the mailings were clipped as spam in the first place. AOL is accusing the group sending out these emergency alerts of using many of the tactics commonly associated with spam. Of course, it's not entirely clear what those tactics were. AOL's spokesperson hints that the mailings didn't include a return address, but doesn't say that specifically. He also says that anyone sending out a lot of emails for a legitimate reason should first get their mailings "pre-approved" by ISPs. Say what? An emergency alert provider needs to go around to every ISP from every person who signs up for their list to get approval first? That seems to be going a bit too far.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Where's Gov. Bush on this emergency?
I smell emergency legislation.
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Cut AOL some slack
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No Subject Given
I can't think of a more UNRELIABLE medium for letting the masses know something is wrong.
On top of that, what if these were hoaxes?
While I dislike AOL as much as the next person, there is social engineering hacking out there and this could have been one of those ways.
And Mike, please leave politics out of this.
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All ISPs are heading down this road...
What a bucket of garbage. Fortunately, there are new ways to handle this, leaving ISPs as the "authority" and the money-grubbing middlemen-marketers in the dust. Anyone building a business on email today will not be around in 10 years.
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AOL's standards are clear
Is there any word on what triggered this particular block?
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