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AOL to Charge Senders for Incoming Email

pdclarry writes "AOL announced on January 30 that it will phase out its Enhanced Whitelist service in June in favour of Goodmail CertifiedEmail, which carries an as yet unspecified per-message fee. Until now, a mailing list gets on the AOL whitelist by following good e-mail practices, such as cleaning up dead addresses, making it easy for people to leave mailing lists, and of course not sending any spam. This is all going to be thrown out the window and replaced with the payment of hard currency to Goodmail. People who can afford to pay this fee will have the privilege of reaching AOL subscribers, others will end up in junk folders. Yahoo is expected to follow down the same path."

462 comments

  1. Whoa. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is going against the reason that junk mail folders are there... Basically the junk mail folder will become just another spam-infested inbox.

    1. Re:Whoa. by shrewd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      in the end being charged to send emails to AOL users will just become another of the long list of reasons why AOL users have no friends and are the butt of many a joke...

    2. Re:Whoa. by geofferensis · · Score: 1

      In the end will just become another of the long list of reasons why have no friends and are the butt of many a joke...

      These could be used for lots of things.

    3. Re:Whoa. by geofferensis · · Score: 2

      Darn. Using angle brackets to contain the variables turns out to have been a poor choice. fiddlesticks.

      The above post should read:

      In the end (insert action here) will just become another of the long list of reasons why (insert group causing or being effected by action here) have no friends and are the butt of many a joke...

    4. Re:Whoa. by shrewd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      you mean (gasp!) you want to turn what i said into like a new slashdot MEAN!?!?!? OMGOMGOMG :D i don't think it will catch on but i am terribly honoured sir!

    5. Re:Whoa. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Out with Western Union AOL to replace it ?

    6. Re:Whoa. by indifferent+children · · Score: 1
      you want to turn what i said into like a new slashdot MEAN

      The word that you were looking for is: meme.

      --
      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it. --Mark Twain
    7. Re:Whoa. by shrewd · · Score: 1

      ive only ever heard it said :) i was wondering why google wasn't being helpful

    8. Re:Whoa. by neomajic · · Score: 1

      That's ok with me. I block all AOL email anyway.

    9. Re:Whoa. by IngramJames · · Score: 0

      Basically the junk mail folder will become just another spam-infested inbox.

      Given that the inbox on any given AOL user right now is likely to contain 1,000 emails saying:
      "LOLOLOLOLOLOL ME TOO!!!1! ROFL"
      I can't quite see the distinction you are attempting to draw.

      --
      'No rational religion claims "supernatural" exists, that's an atheist slander.' - seen on slashdot.
    10. Re:Whoa. by bigpat · · Score: 1

      why AOL users have no friends and are the butt of many a joke...

      Yes, I would be terribly upset at this completely assinine move on the part of AOL, but I don't think it is worth anyone's time to get upset over, since AOL is a dying company and this is just one more nail in the coffin. And I assume there would some whitelist for paying aol subscribers to add their friends and family? Otherwise, this wouldn't get very far, the first time grandma couldn't get her grandchildren's emails there will be hell to pay.

      This should be seen for exactly what it is, AOL's attempt to cash in on SPAM directly to the detriment of its paying customers.

    11. Re:Whoa. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously, you've never read Snow Crash seeing that you couldn't spell meme. Heck, you probably haven't even read the wiki pages on the popular 4chan & /. memes.

      AYBBTU

    12. Re:Whoa. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Given that the inbox on any given AOL user right now is likely to contain 1,000 emails saying..."

      Interesting, as I'm an AOL user and don't get those. Not to say I think this is a good idea, as I suspect it will cause a significant decrease in users for AOL and Yahoo and anyone else who institutes it.

    13. Re:Whoa. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the actual article on the Goodmail site
      these rules ONLY apply to BULK senders and it ONLY impacts whether or not links and pictures are allowed
      Linked from Goodmail home page http://www.clickz.com/news/article.php/3581301
      "As part of its e-mail security practices, AOL blocks the display of images and hyperlinks on most high-volume messages, except if senders are on the AOL Enhanced whitelist and maintain very low complaint rates. Beginning today, AOL will also allow senders who have undergone accreditation through Goodmail to display images and hyperlinks by default. Goodmail charges accredited companies a fraction of a cent per message sent. "

    14. Re:Whoa. by jtorkbob · · Score: 1

      but I don't think it is worth anyone's time to get upset over, since AOL is a dying company

      Funny, I was saying the same thing about AOL in 1996 when they failed to make use of the native dial-up networking capability of Windows 95. Somehow, though, they've persisted. Like roaches they are.

      --
      AC: Only on slashdot... could the sentence "My hovercraft is full of eels." be moderated "+4, Insightful
    15. Re:Whoa. by shrewd · · Score: 1

      yeah well thats the first thing i did when i found the spelling...

  2. I wish I could... by ufoman · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wish I could charge AOL for sending me all those AOL CD's I get in the mail.

    --
    The following statement is false.
    The previous statement is true.
    Welcome to my world.
    1. Re:I wish I could... by ataahdc · · Score: 1

      I collect those CD's from the mail/retail stores. They'll be worth something, someday. Some VERY DISTANT day in the future.

    2. Re:I wish I could... by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Funny


          Actually, they're already paying for that, to the USPS. :) They didn't pay me to shovel them directly from the mailbox to the trash can though.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    3. Re:I wish I could... by TheGavster · · Score: 5, Funny

      Why trash what you can transform into lovely furniture? http://stupidco.com/aol_throne_finished.html

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    4. Re:I wish I could... by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Amen!! If it weren't for the fact that they're sending physical CDs to physical mail boxes, they'd very easily be considered spammers, and for what? I highly doubt a good percent of the people who receive AOL CDs actually use them (for their intended purposes).

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
    5. Re:I wish I could... by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

      I wish I could charge AOL for sending me all those AOL CD's I get in the mail.

      You could always put them back in the mail box marker "Return to Sender" and make them pay for the postage again.

    6. Re:I wish I could... by rm69990 · · Score: 1

      My grandma hangs them on strings in the garden to scare away birds. She lives on an acreage, so the garden itself is about 2 acres.....she's about 1/4 finished by now. I figure give her another 5 years, and she'll be done.

    7. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      don't forget to attach a brick to make the fee more euuhm 'heavy'

    8. Re:I wish I could... by HD+Webdev · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You could always put them back in the mail box marker "Return to Sender" and make them pay for the postage again.

      Not to bust your bubble, but bulk mail of that type is thrown away instead of actually being returned.

      --
      This is not a dream, not a dream...we are transmitting from the year 1-9-9-9.
    9. Re:I wish I could... by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      What we need is a federal Do Not Mail list. :)

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    10. Re:I wish I could... by Gleng · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Then stuff them in one of those prepaid business reply envelopes that you get from credit card companies, and then post that.

      Maybe they'll both learn then!

      --
      "Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
    11. Re:I wish I could... by rockstar1o9 · · Score: 2, Funny

      WOW, that chair is awesome. What a great way to use 4000 AOL cds.

    12. Re:I wish I could... by aed · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here in .nl we have something called an 'antwoordnummer' (answer number) which is the mail equivalent of a toll-free number.
      It's basically a PO-box where you can send mail to without postage, as the recipient pays for the mail.

      There have been numerous projects here to collect those cd's, and mailing them back to AOL/Compuserve using their 'antwoordnummer' - Thereby making them pay (by weight) for receiving them back :)
      There have been variations on the theme, eg first shredding the cd's so they can't send them out again; or as token of appreciation, sending them a complimentary brick included in the package (saving them the trouble of replacing the windows where the brick would otherwise have been thrown through ;)

    13. Re:I wish I could... by ReddyFreddy · · Score: 1

      someone always get them back.. for years I have returned unsolicited mail in the "return envelope" they suppy. I simply stuff anything I can into the envelopes (including AOL cd's) and drop them back in the mail. Sometimes you have to wait till you get an envelope big enough, or sometimes you have to tape the envelope to a package, but it all goes back. I do everything I can to increase their advertising cost, in hopes it will someday stop (I know dream on). They made the agreement with the USPO to pay the return postage not me. I just wish I could figure out a way to return spam to the rightfull owner..

    14. Re:I wish I could... by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      the biggest difference is you can 'turn off' unsolicited bulk mailings from the Post Office. So other than being completely different...yep it's the same ;-)

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    15. Re:I wish I could... by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Do people really get that many AOL cds? I live in Canada, and when modems were "da bomb", we used to get a free floppy disk every couple of months. In the last couple years, I haven't seen one though. At least not in my mail box. They leave them around the drug store counters for people to pick up, but I don't think I've seen a CD in the mail for quite some time.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    16. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they don't fit unless you fold them.

    17. Re:I wish I could... by matth · · Score: 1

      You can? How do you turn off bulk mail from the post office? I'd love to do that!

    18. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take the credit card applications, mark them "do not send any more mail to this name or address," and send them back in the prepaid envelopes. After doing this consistently for a couple of months, I rarely get these any more.

    19. Re:I wish I could... by ppz003 · · Score: 1

      I loved the days when I would get a whole box of free floppies that i could format, relabel, and reuse just about every week!

    20. Re:I wish I could... by onepoint · · Score: 1

      I don't know how to shut it off at the post office but I was able to reduce my junk mail ( snail mail ) by following the steps that are posted at the Direct marketing association web site for consumers

      www.dmaconsumers.org/consumerassistance.html

      I hope that helps you.

      I went from 120 pieces of junk mail to 12 in less than 4 months. it works.

      Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    21. Re:I wish I could... by B3ryllium · · Score: 1

      I saw a display unit with a ton of them at Royal Bank once. Scary.

    22. Re:I wish I could... by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      Here in .nl we have something called an 'antwoordnummer'

      Why do the folks down under always make up the silliest sounding words to describe the most simple objects?

      "Oh no, that wallabee just stole my dijgeridoo!"

    23. Re:I wish I could... by aed · · Score: 1

      I dunno, you should ask them
      I've never even been there :)
      (.nl==the Netherlands, which is in Western Europe)

    24. Re:I wish I could... by dyslexicbunny · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Kind of offtopic but deals with business reply.

      You can also fill the credit card envelopes with the daily coupons and send them back. I got a complaint about it once since it cost them money on the postage so I mailed them the postage too. Since thirty-seven cents is kind of heavy with seven nickels and two pennies, they probably had to pay extra postage.

    25. Re:I wish I could... by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      Do they still do that? I haven't seen any in quite awhile.

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
    26. Re:I wish I could... by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

      And that creates an interesting point: What prevents junk mailers from paying Goodmail for the privilege of sending messages to AOL users?

    27. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just mark them "refused--return to sender" and hand it back to your mail carrier. It won't fill your trash can, and they get to pay for their mailing centers to reprocess the junk.

    28. Re:I wish I could... by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      (.nl==the Netherlands, which is in Western Europe)

      I meant down under Germany.

      That's my position and I'm sticking to it ;-)

    29. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too bad the Netherlands is northwest of Germany. I suspect that I don't have to ask of which education system you are a product.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Physical_Map_of _Europe.jpg

    30. Re:I wish I could... by Asphalt · · Score: 1
      Too bad the Netherlands is northwest of Germany. I suspect that I don't have to ask of which education system you are a product.

      Not 100% true.

      There are indeed parts of Germany that are north of the Netherlands, such as the Denmark Peninsula, and sections of Germany that are slightly West than parts of the Netherlands .... but that's hardly the point. I just didn't think it flowed as well as "Down under the North Sea". I simply picked a country in Western Europe near the Netherlands.

      It was a tongue-in-cheek comment when it was pointed out that I mistook a Netherlands and New Zealand extention, and FWIW, I don't wish to be a part of an education system that turns out products who are quite so anally plugged on such lighthearted banter.

    31. Re:I wish I could... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


          They have a terms of service which is to be followed...

          But...

          If I'm a provider passing lots of mail for a variety of reason, and I mix in a bunch of spam, I can always say "Oh, bad user, they've been terminated..." blah, blah..

          They're just looking to make an extra buck, they're not looking to solve the problem.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    32. Re:I wish I could... by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

      Here's how I did it-

      Wait until you get some kind of spam in your postbox that comes with an envelope that's already pre-paid for postage.

      Steam it open, wrap it around a brick, and send it back.

      Trust me, your post spam will dry up overnight.

      --
      So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
    33. Re:I wish I could... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

      Actually, bulk mail just gets tossed, it doesn't get returned to sender no matter how you mark it.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    34. Re:I wish I could... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why complain? Sure, the CD's are worthless but they generally come in great packaging which can be used to store your own valuable CD's. They also make great mailers if you're sending a CD to someone.

    35. Re:I wish I could... by unitron · · Score: 1
      "Wait until you get some kind of spam in your postbox that comes with an envelope that's already pre-paid for postage.

      Steam it open, wrap it around a brick, and send it back."

      Why waste a perfectly good brick on a golden opportunity to get rid of all those AOL, Lycos, etc. CDs piling up all over the house?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    36. Re:I wish I could... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Just send the reply envelope back empty - they still pay postage plus a service fee. If enough people sent every reply envelpe back the whole system would fall apart.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    37. Re:I wish I could... by YttriumOxide · · Score: 1

      So actually, you ended up confusing the Netherlands, Australia and New Zealand then? (hint: wallabys and didgeridoos are .au, not .nz)

      Oddly, I've lived in all three of those countries... *sigh* I miss NL.

      --
      My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
      Also on facebook as: DroppingAcidDaleBewan
    38. Re:I wish I could... by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

      It's a shame that the AOL software doesn't fit on a floppy disk anymore. Floppy disks can be re-written to; CDs can't.

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
  3. Dupe. by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1, Insightful

    From last April 1st. Right?

    ....right??

    Seriously, this has to be a joke. Pay? To receive email?

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Dupe. by Elminst · · Score: 2, Informative

      No...
      The SENDER pays for the "privelege" of sending mail to AOL.

      --
      No unauthorized use. Trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.
    2. Re:Dupe. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      No, it's non-AOL'ers paying to send to AOL'ers. In other words, it's even more fucked up.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    3. Re:Dupe. by pete6677 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm sure people are just going to be lining up to pay AOL for the privilege of sending mail to its users. I'm also sure that users are not going to switch when they find out that their friends can't mail them because they or their ISP did not pay the AOL tax. Yes indeed, this plan is going to be so popular. I'm sure the spammers are just quaking in their gold-plated boots.

    4. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's just FUD. AOL has not said that they are blocking all email that is not sent through GoodMail. They are replacing their whitelist with the service.

      You don't need to be on the whitelist to send personal emails today, so you won't need to pay to send email tomorrow.

      This only affects senders of bulk emails (mailing lists and spammers).

    5. Re:Dupe. by Jackhamr · · Score: 1

      Actually, senders only pay for sending out bulk mail such as mailing lists or spam.

    6. Re:Dupe. by aussie_a · · Score: 2

      Makes perfect sense to me. AOL saw all those spammers making so much money, they wanted a slice of the action. Now spammers have to pay a fee in order to reach AOL's customers.

      Why would someone want to be an AOL customer again?

    7. Re:Dupe. by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What about my slashdot replies? Is slashdot a mailing list, or are those considered "personal" emails??? Is every OSS project with a sourceforge.net address going to get blasted by this?

    8. Re:Dupe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      This only affects senders of bulk emails (mailing lists and spammers).

      Which seems silly to group legitimate mailing lists in with spammers. Oh well, if I was a mailing list admin I'd simply say "go get a GMail account if you want to receive our mailing list, AOL sucks."

    9. Re:Dupe. by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure people are just going to be lining up to pay AOL for the privilege of sending mail to its users. I'm also sure that users are not going to switch when they find out that their friends can't mail them because they or their ISP did not pay the AOL tax. Yes indeed, this plan is going to be so popular. I'm sure the spammers are just quaking in their gold-plated boots.

      I was agreeing with you until I realized you were being sarcastic. AOL has 19.5 million subscribers paying $21.95/month for the service; many of these customers have plenty of money and aren't very bright. Hell yes, companies will be willing to pay to send mail to these people.

      AOL is losing customers - 6 million in the past three years - but I suspect this has largely been due to increased demand for broadband, rather than customer dissatisfaction. The rest of us may hate AOL's service, but their customers are generally happy - they just wish it was faster.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    10. Re:Dupe. by BadDream · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But its very easy to get blacklisted by AOL. Just need a couple people to report you as spam. They don't even tell you they are blocking you. You just start not being able to send. AOL will now have every incentive to blacklist companies so they can generate more income.

      --
      No matter how subtle the wizard, a knife between the shoulder blades will seriously cramp his style.
    11. Re:Dupe. by Albanach · · Score: 3, Insightful
      This only affects senders of bulk emails (mailing lists and spammers).

      No this affects mailing lists, not spammers.

      If they want to block spam they can use filters. Spam these days tends to come from millions of zombie windows boxes - they'll continue to send small volumes of mail to AOL from forged email addresses and be completely unaffected by this.

      Large companies will pay because, presumably, the cost will be less than their average profit per email.

      The folk who will be left in the cold will be those that host free mailing lists - that could be your local church, local voluntary associations, schools, folk who freely manage topical lists of interest etc. These folk won't make back the money because email isn't a revenue stream. They're the only ones who will see any effect.

    12. Re:Dupe. by niiler · · Score: 1
      I remember in the early 1990s when AOL came online. Up until then, usenet was relatively garbage free except in the fall when new college students would get email accounts and quickly learn netiquette or get flamed into submission. Then AOL showed up and all the bulletin boards had more noise than signal.

      If people have to pay to send email to AOL users, perhaps AOL will go away as it should have more than 10 years ago. :-)

    13. Re:Dupe. by monkeydo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, this seems to only apply to their "enhanced" whitelist, which allows commercial senders to embed links and images in emails. It doesn't seem to affect the standard whitelist for legitimate non-commercial bulk mailers like mailing lists.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum
      The only thing more annoying than a Libertarian is an (un|mis)informed Libertarian
    14. Re:Dupe. by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      I think the summary is wrong; "People who can afford to pay this fee will have the privilege of reaching AOL subscribers, others will end up in junk folders". Though details in TFA are a bit murky, apparently non-Goodmail will have images and links blocked; so this should not affect plain text mail at all, even HTML mail should still be deliverd in a sanitised form.

      Also, rather gutsy to have the 1984-style name "Goodmail" for a mail blocking "service". MiniTrue approved double-plus good.

    15. Re:Dupe. by JourneyExpertApe · · Score: 1

      Still, there are many not-for-profit mailing lists that may be seriously inconvenienced by this new development. Subscribers may have to get free email accounts (e.g. gmail) to continue to use them. Who knows, they may even see the light and leave AOL alltogether. (A guy can dream, can't he?)

      --
      If you can read this sig, you're too close.
    16. Re:Dupe. by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

      You don't need to be on the whitelist to send personal emails today, so you won't need to pay to send email tomorrow. I must beg to differ. With the money that could me made by forcing a white-list upon every user, it wouldn't surprise me in the least to see this some time in the future. Besides, would you say "It didn't rain today, so it won't rain tomorrow"? C'mon!

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
    17. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      My understanding is that they have no blacklist, so it has nothing to do with reporting messages as spam. If you send the 'same' email to more than some number of AOL recipients, then you are a bulk mailer, and must currently get yourself onto their whitelist.

    18. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      No this affects mailing lists, not spammers.
      There's a very fine line between your average mailing list and your average spammer. One man's mailing list is another man's spam.

      they'll continue to send small volumes of mail
      If they're truely sending small volumes, then they're probably not a problem.

      If there are millions of boxes each sending small numbers of the same email, then it is trivial to realise that they are the same emailer.

      The basic gist is: hash every email that comes in. Count identical hashes. If the count goes up too fast, block the messages matching that hash. The only real trickery is in defining the hash to be fuzzy (to stop a few characters difference from changing the hash).

    19. Re:Dupe. by jmenon · · Score: 1

      Now all they have to do over at AOL is to give users the ability to add their own tax on top of the incoming mail fee. Wouldn't it be great to be paid for every piece of junk mail that you receive?

      In fact, that would make it worthwhile for me to consider paying for an AOL subscription.

      --
      "Stop throwing the Constitution in my face! It's just a goddamned piece of paper!" -- George W. Bush
    20. Re:Dupe. by dougmc · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Just need a couple people to report you as spam.
      That's not specific to AOL. There's a number of ISPs or hosts (or have been, anyways) which will start blocking all emails (to all users) from your mail server after a few emails are reported as spam. Which seems reasonable ... at first. Looking a bit deeper, apparantly some users will report mail as spam rather than unsubscribe -- even for a mailing list that they explicitly subscribed to themselves (i.e. send a mail to list-subscribe@whatever, then reply to the confirmation email with the special cookie ...) Even when every single email has unsubscribe instructions at the bottom. Even though the emails aren't `spammy' at all. (Though it can happen when somebody sends spam to a mailing list too, but that's not really what I'm talking about.)

      Tends to be a drag when you're running a legitimate mailing list and somebody can't be bothered to look at the procedure for getting unsubscribed ... and suddenly emails to everybody at his ISP start bouncing, and the people who aren't getting their mails think it's because YOU screwed something up.

      It also happens when somebody explicitly sets up a ~/.forward on your system (on their account) to forward all their mail somewhere else. Which seems reasonable, but then they go reporting spams received wherever they read their mail, and that system decides that `oho! This site must be an open relay! Look at the Received: headers!' and submits you to a RBL without even bothering to try and forward a spam through your system.

      There's lots of knee-jerk reactions going on out there in the name of `fighting spam'. Perhaps they're the right thing to do most of the time, but not all the time. And trying to convince somebody that they made a mistake? Fergetabout ...

    21. Re:Dupe. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 1

      If this hash is the way these things are detected, what's to stop me from generating 2 or 300 random chars to tack on to the end of every email? The process would not slow down my email machine by a significant amount, and even if it did, I'd do it to fak out the filter...

      --
      "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    22. Re:Dupe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, you're a bit behind the times. The endless September actually ended about a year ago.

    23. Re:Dupe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to clarify a point that might be missed in this maelstrom: AOL has announced that they are phasing out their *enhanced* whitelist, which grants a subset of their normal whitelist entries additional privileges (e.g., images and links enabled) to particularly well-behaved senders. They have not, at this time, announced any plans to phase out the whitelist. Thus, your local neighbordhood church's mailing list will still be able to benefit from the normal whitelist program -- they simply won't have images or links enabled. This distinction is highly important, since A) for a simple newsletter, images and links are a luxury, not a complete necessity, and B) most phishing schemes rely on images and links that resemble well-known brands to fool people into giving away personal information.

      See http://postmaster.info.aol.com/whitelist/index.htm l for a more detailed explanation of the differences between the whitelist and enhanced whitelist programs at AOL.

    24. Re:Dupe. by Kelson · · Score: 1

      That's what he means by "fuzzy." Coming up with a hash that will catch *mostly*-identical mails (and, one hopes, not pick up too many false positives). Razor/Cloudmark does things this way, and has a fairly goot detection rate even though spammers have beentrying to use hash-busters to defeat it for at least 4 years.

    25. Re:Dupe. by monkeydo · · Score: 1

      The folk who will be left in the cold will be those that host free mailing lists - that could be your local church, local voluntary associations, schools, folk who freely manage topical lists of interest etc. These folk won't make back the money because email isn't a revenue stream. They're the only ones who will see any effect.

      They can apparantly still use the AOL Whitelist. They are phasing out the "Enhanced" Whitelist, which is apparantly for commercial mailers.

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum
      The only thing more annoying than a Libertarian is an (un|mis)informed Libertarian
    26. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      It's basically a statistical clustering problem that has been solved in a number of different ways (and I alluded to in my post with the fuzzy reference). Just off the top of my head, If I were to be writing such a system, I would probably try applying plagurism detection techniques.

      Take for example Markov Chains, which are frequently used to detect plagurism in Computer Science schools at universities:
      The basic idea is after possibly doing some basic preprocessing of the emails (perhaps you will remove punctuation), you break the emails up into bite sized chunks (probably words). Take some number of words in a row (usually 3), and hash them. Then slide a "window" along the email by a word, and generate another hash. Continue throughout the email. You end up with a list of hashes for each email.

      It turns out you can do really fast fuzzy searches in a collection of these lists, especially if you don't mind getting a few false positives (which you can then rule out by directly comparing the "possibly matching" emails to get a "percentage similarity"). The lists themselves are quick to create (linear over the amount of text in the email), don't take up much space (they're usually a little smaller than the main-text of the email), and don't need to be held for long (you're only really interested in the rate that similar emails are arriving).

    27. Re:Dupe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So what you're saying is:

      1. Retards can subscribe to mailing lists
      2. Retards can run public MTAs
      Retards on the internet; so what's new? Personally I'd suggest that in the case of #1, ignore it. Why is that your problem? If the other subscribers at that ISP feel strongly enough it should be their responsibility to contact their ISP and get the blacklist fixed.
    28. Re:Dupe. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      That's what spammers do. Haven't you seen spam with big strings of random letters, and occasionally random words thrown in?

      Another popular technique is send out chunks of "real" text, grabbed from random websites or Project Gutenberg. I got about 600k of George Orwell's 1984 tacked onto the end of some spam recently, cut at randomish points.

    29. Re:Dupe. by nath_de · · Score: 1

      The worst thing is that they do not actually look who sent the message but just block the From address. I was blocked from sending to AOL for some time, because some stupid worm used my mail address as fake From address.

    30. Re:Dupe. by valderost · · Score: 0
      Sorry, I've got to disagree that images and links are a luxury. What you're suggesting is that non-profits are second-class organizations who shouldn't expect to take advantage of the same technologies that keep for-profit businesses running. Many small non-profits already have enough challenges keeping their budgets in the black while doing good work, and being marginalized by others' thinking like this only makes their jobs more difficult.

      I hope AOL will take it easy on legitimate non-profits, especially charitable ones.

    31. Re:Dupe. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Yes. This is another assault on traditional methods of 'net communications, this time the mailing list discussion group. Couched as 'retaliation for spam' it is the ISPs again removing a service they have traditionally been obligated to supply. I guess we are supposed to use 'Yahoo groups' or some other advertising-laden and top-down ('at the will of the site provider') alternative to listservs.

      OSS will suffer for this, that is certain.

    32. Re:Dupe. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a very fine line between your average mailing list and your average spammer. One man's mailing list is another man's spam.

      No, there is NOT a fine line.

      Mailing lists are always positive opt-in. And they have an easy opt-out mechanism. And they specifically contain information that the recipient has requested. Often, they even echo back messages that the recipient has contributed to the discussion threads.

      How is this in any way a 'fine line' differentiation from spam?

      I'm becoming afraid that anti-spam ranting and hatred takes away peoples' common sense.

    33. Re:Dupe. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      So, basically, it's what 'Computer Scientist' dorks do to avoid having to go out into the real world and become 'IT' drones whose job it is to put more paper in the fucking LJ5 up on second floor in finance.

    34. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      Kind of. The good news is that the Computer Scientist dorks can go out into the real world, do stuff that lets them use their brains, and a little creativity, all while (generally) getting paid more than the drones.

    35. Re:Dupe. by Ulven · · Score: 1

      How many people on OSS mailing lists actually use AOL?

      I wouldn't have thought it was that many.

    36. Re:Dupe. by himself · · Score: 1

      >
      > This only affects senders of bulk emails (mailing lists and spammers).
      >
            Well, I work in a .edu IT department, and I know that our Admissions staff sends out lots of email to prospective students. You know, teen-agers at home on Mom & Dad's PC -- many of whom have a sub-account off their parents' AOL account.

              In early 2002, Harvard sent out acceptance letters via email, and "between 75 and 100" were blocked because harvard.edu wasn't on the AOL whitelist. See:
                      http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2 002/01/02/BU166284.DTL&nl=biz

            So now all the colleges should pay AOL to send out their acceptance letters and other announcements (much less all the other stuff that our adminstration wants moved from paper mail to email, like grades, class rosters, payment confirmaityon, &c., in order to cut costs and improve delivery time)? *snort* If Slashdotters got mad when SBC wanted companies and consumers to pay for preferrential service, why doesn't this make them mad? Is it just that AOL is so déclassé? And how come no one thinks there could possibly be a legitimate use of bulk email besides mailing lists? Sheesh.

    37. Re:Dupe. by Lord+Gimli · · Score: 1

      "Even when every single email has unsubscribe instructions at the bottom."

      In a perfect world, this would work just fine, but...

      What about those you use the replies (via the unsubscribe request) for verifying that your email address is in fact valid (and active)? Then, instead of unsubscribing to an email, you end up receiving 10,000 more emails since you've just informed the sender that they have found a valid and active email account??

      --
      "Mentally confused and prone to wandering."
    38. Re:Dupe. by phrozen77 · · Score: 1

      my wifes forum also is on aol's blacklist (or the whole (dedicated) server?)


      its really sad that they blacklist you for sending email that everyone has agreed to get upon registering, where also is an option to turn off getting newsletters and stuff...

      then again, when complaining to tech support via mail or phone, it all falls on deaf ears or you get non-qualified answers from callcenter-agents that maybe know how to turn a computer on and read predefined answers from the screen..

      AOL: So, you say some people dont get your emails?
      Wife: Yes, almost every mail that i send via my server gets bounced back.
      AOL: You know, we changed something in our mail system the last week, you need to change the port in your email-program


      unfortunately i wasnt at home when she made that call and i just sighed in relief when she told me about it and decided that calling them just wasnt worth the money and in the end we now blocked *@aol.com from registering to her board...

    39. Re:Dupe. by generationxyu · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm a sender of bulk mail. I run about 15 mailing lists for the ACM chapter at my school. It's 100% opt-in (except officers, they don't have a choice), and everyone who wants to be taken off is taken off immediately. Everything's moderated for spam, even after being sent through SpamAssassin at two different levels. We started getting blocked by AOL -- apparently some people would rather mark clearly legitimate messages as spam than read the unsubscribe instructions at the bottom. So I filed for whitelist. It worked -- they stopped complaining. Now I guess I'll just have to force a non-AOL address.

      --
      I mod down pyramid schemes in sigs.
    40. Re:Dupe. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > This only affects senders of bulk emails (mailing lists and spammers)

      THANK YOU!!! I can't believe I had to go halfway through the comments to find someone who actually read and understood the article!

    41. Re:Dupe. by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      Which seems reasonable ... at first. Looking a bit deeper, apparantly some users will report mail as spam rather than unsubscribe -- even for a mailing list that they explicitly subscribed to themselves (i.e. send a mail to list-subscribe@whatever, then reply to the confirmation email with the special cookie ...) I suggest adding your group/list name to the subject line of the email, otherwise its highly likely to get flagged as spam, and for people that get high volumes of spam, the occasional 1 in 1000 good that gets flagged is the price to be paid. Even when every single email has unsubscribe instructions at the bottom. Yes, so do about 95% of the spam emails I get,and those don't work.

      Again, differentiation of your mail from the bulk of spam is a very subtle thing. If your sending address includes something referring to the list, and the subject line does as well - you are far less likely to face that problem.

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    42. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's just a shame that if you look through the replies to my post, you just see a bunch of poeple who missed my point. Everyone seemed to think that I was condoning the move, when all I was doing was accusing my parent poster of FUDing.

      The /. community seems so quick to turn any issue into a dichotomy. It's a shame really.

    43. Re:Dupe. by dougmc · · Score: 1
      What about those you use the replies (via the unsubscribe request) for verifying that your email address is in fact valid (and active)?
      Of course it's valid and active. It was verified as part of the user signing up for the mailing list. I'm not talking about spam here -- I'm talking about legitimate mailing lists, lists that somebody had to explicitly subscribe themselves to, and then verify that it was them that signed them up.

      I understand that you're saying `never respond to a spam's unsubscribe instructions', and that's generally good advice, but if it's for a mailing list that you EXPLICITLY subscribed to (not even not cliking on `do not send me any more emails' somewhere), use the frickin' unsubscribe. Or procmail (or it's equivilent) it to /dev/null. But don't report it as spam ...

    44. Re:Dupe. by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      It's not particularly creative to implment sliding window schemes. There's very little 'science' in 'Computer Science' because most of it was figured out by mathematicians decades ago. It's more of a craft, like knitting, which is also highly mathematical. It's Data Structures and Algorhythms. A variant on 'red white and blue scarves' or the 'fuzzy ball for the top of the hat' algorhythms your Aunt Minnie knows.

    45. Re:Dupe. by vita · · Score: 1

      People are remarkable in that they sign up for email, then forget, then don't look at the bottom link to unsubscribe, then complain to AOL. This causes a lot of work for ISPs to get reinstated. It usually takes several hours, once more than a day! AOl simply does not care.

        What these lazy users don't realize is, that they've just inconvenienced everyone else using that same ISP, because now they can't send mail to their friends at AOL and don't know why. It creates a big mess, all over a legit email in the first place.

          And yes, we have our name, the mailing name in the subject line AND in the body of the amail AND in the unsubscribe line.

    46. Re:Dupe. by afaik_ianal · · Score: 1

      It's not particularly creative to implment sliding window schemes.

      Of course not - the implementation itself is very rarely creative. Any monkey should be able to implement the chaining part of the solution I suggested. It is the problem solving that is creative; cross-pollinating solutions from different areas to solve a new problem, or an existing problem in a different way - That's creative. Now, take the matching part of my solution, where I've solved it with a bit of hand-waving (I haven't actually offered a solution to "fast fuzzy matching", and you're going to need a bit of creativity to determine a reasonable algorithm. Then, a code monkey can implement your solution.

      There's very little 'science' in 'Computer Science' because most of it was figured out by mathematicians decades ago.

      Not sure what that comment is in response to; the point of my post was that comp sci grads can do interesting stuff without staying at uni, but I'll bite anyway (I want to avoid the eternal "comp sci: science or engineering" side of things though). The reason there is very little 'science' in computer science, is not because it's all been figured out already. It is because 'computer science' is a big field; the term has been heavily overloaded in the past couple of decades.

      There is ample 'applied comp sci research' going on at universities (well, the ones that focus on more than just churning out drones), and out in the real world (well, at the companies that focus on more than shipping the next product - they do exist!). The more theoretical stuff is harder to identify, because as you say it tends to be done by mathematicians, and it takes significant time to be adopted (I'm not aware of much theoretical computer science being done outside universities, either).

      Industry needs to solve new problems all the time. Many of these problems can be solved by modifying an existing algorithm. Some require brand now algorithms. Whether the work be done at a university or in industry, it needs to be backed by scientific method (I agree that it often isn't, but there are good players out there). Almost no comp sci grads end up doing that kind of work, but if they want it, it *is* out there.

  4. Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...At least, that's what all their contacts are going to say when AOL tries to charge them for the "privilage" of contacting them. On the bright side, this ought to drive even more AOL'ers to other services, though!

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    1. Re:Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by TheNoxx · · Score: 2

      No kidding. Actually this sounds like it'll just drive the divide between net users with good and bad taste even wider apart.

      Seriously, how many computer-savvy folk will give a blithering fuck about not being able to send mail to some cheesedick who refuses to switch from AOL to something reasonable?

      Actually, if they try this, it'll probably stick for a week, *maybe*, before their servers get slammed with hatemail and boycotts. That, any every businessman who has an AOL account will switch to something else, as I do not believe anyone who's trying to buy/sell/network can afford to miss an important email because of AOL's abject greed.

      --
      Ex nihilo nihil fit.
    2. Re:Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by Guppy06 · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is a good thing? I'd rather keep all people who would use AOL in one, easy-to-block domain!

    3. Re:Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by app13b0y · · Score: 1

      please think about what you're saying there! keeping all of the script kiddies on AOL is a _good_ idea! then we only need to update our iptables scripts with about a list of 50 subnets. now, you push all the kiddies to other networks, what are we going to do o_O! you're talking mass chaos, it's like the unleashing of terrorists on the US, and we all know what happens then....

    4. Re:Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Seriously, how many computer-savvy folk will give a blithering fuck
      > about not being able to send mail to some cheesedick who refuses to
      > switch from AOL to something reasonable?

      I do.

      I have a lot of clients who use AOL and Yahoo. If I can't email them or host their websites, they will move their business elsewhere. So it comes down to a business decision. Does it cost me more to pay for AOL certification or does it cost me more to lose those clients? "A fraction of a cent per message sent" may turn out to be cheaper.

      They may be "cheesedicks" as you so eloquently stated. But they are also clients. Can't live without them.

    5. Re:Well, fuck AOL subscribers, then! by Harker · · Score: 1

      I fully plan to let all my clients (also friends) know about this, and how it might affect their business (yes, I know two people who have their business email go through AOL) and will set them up with a gmail account as an alternative.

      If that much mail is being blocked, then it's time to highly suggest they look elsewhere for service. I doubt most of them actually use the features that make AOL worth keeping (assuming there are any).

      H.

      --
      When VCR's are outlawed, only outlaws will have VCR's.
  5. Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Bryansix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why does anyone use AOL anymore?

    1. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Funny

      They use it because they're middle-aged housewives who learned to use it 10 years ago and are threatened by change.

      ...at least, that describes the only person I know who still uses it.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by jonadab · · Score: 5, Funny

      > Why does anyone use AOL anymore?

      Have you ever tried to cancel an AOL account?

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    3. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Macrat · · Score: 1

      Because they still think AOL IS the internet.

      It is easier to switch people off Windows to a Mac than it is to switch them off AOL.

    4. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by crashelite · · Score: 0

      didnt AOL admit that half their users dont even have a computer?

      --
      (yes i know i suck at spelling fell free to correct my grammar and/or spellin i dont care, im still not going to change
    5. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


          I can't. There's roughly an 80% chance that I've been blacklisted. There's no reason for it though. When we moved our mailserver to a new network, we found ourselves already blacklisted. It comes and goes, even though we've jumped through all of their hoops accordingly.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    6. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by deadlinegrunt · · Score: 1

      For the same reason grandma uses windows along with your mom and dad.
      Mindshare folks...

      --
      BSD is designed. Linux is grown. C++ libs
    7. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by the-amazing-blob · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, I have. I had to cancel 3 credit cards, move to a different state, and get a new identity. I now incinerate any aol trial cds I get.

    8. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Someone should write a software program that looks like the AOL software but works with any normal ISP account.

      So, geeks etc could show their AOL-using family members this new software that is "exactly like AOL only cheaper".

    9. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by nizo · · Score: 1

      I wonder if I can get a bounty from AOL for bringing you "back in" ?

    10. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      Why does anyone use AOL anymore?


      Obvious answer: Because of their superior customer service.

    11. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by whoever57 · · Score: 4, Informative
      Have you ever tried to cancel an AOL account?
      A friend of mine did that very thing today. My friend had only kept the account for the email address and apparently, AOL will let him keep using the email address even though he is no longer paying anything to AOL.

      I was amazed at this, but now, perhaps it make sense: AOL is monetizing all those long-standing email addresses!

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    12. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by murdocj · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ok, here's the deal. My parents use AOL. They are in their 80s. They've had computers going back to the Apple II, but they aren't geeks. They just want to communicate with their kids via email and look at an occasional web page. So they are comfortable with AOL. I've occasionally told them they ought to look into an ISP and DSL. They've muttered a little and then gone on with their lives. You know what, THEY ARE RIGHT TO USE AOL. It's what they want. They are happy with it. It does what they need. Why the frack should they change? To please you? You don't like how they access the net? Well, maybe I don't like the car you drive, but guess what, I don't get a veto on your car, you don't get a veto on my parent's AOL. Deal with it and move on.

    13. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by jonadab · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > I now incinerate any aol trial cds I get.

      Oh, we use those as craft supplies. You let the kids glue them shiny-side-out to things. It doesn't much matter what things you let kids glue them to; kids just like to glue stuff, and CDs are shiny, so as long as you don't do it too often (more than, say, once a year with any given group of kids), they have a blast gluing AOL CDs to practically anything. For instance, if you have accumulated only enough AOL CDs for two per kid, you let them glue the CDs back-to-back and run a ribbon through the hole, and it's a Christmas tree ornament. (Yes, this is incredibly lame, but a typical six-year-old thinks it's the best fun he's ever had.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    14. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wife used AOL before she met me and gave her then boyfriend access. She cancelled the account and stopped paying for the service four years ago, but the ex-boyfriend logged in a few years later and AOL sent her a bill. When she complained and said she had cancelled the account and it wasn't she who used it, AOL's response was that they never actually close the accounts. She told them she wouldn't pay and they didn't contact her again, but I find it highly suspicious that they don't cancel accounts and retain customer information well beyond your termination of the account.

    15. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Methuseus · · Score: 2, Funny

      You can have a veto on my car! Please! Veto means I'll get a new one to replace it, right?

      --
      Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
    16. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1, Interesting
      They are in their 80s. They've had computers going back to the Apple II, but they aren't geeks.
      OK, so they're like "middle-aged housewife with 10 years experience" * 2 (i.e., 80 years old instead of 40, 20 years experience instead of 10). Same difference.
      So they are comfortable with AOL. I've occasionally told them they ought to look into an ISP and DSL. They've muttered a little and then gone on with their lives.
      That's exactly what I said: they're threatened by change. You just phrased it more tactfully.
      Why the frack should they change? To please you?
      No, they should change in order to continue to receive mail from mailing lists, to save money (AOL is expensive, especially for people on a fixed income!), to avoid being preyed upon by phishers that assume they are stupid because they use AOL*, etc. Oh, and also because if they only use email and view web pages they're not using any of the "extra-value" features of AOL anyway.
      you don't get a veto on my parent's AOL. Deal with it and move on.
      I'm sorry, but when did I ever say I gave a shit about your grandparents' choice of internet-like service providers? The original poster simply asked a question, and I answered it. Did I maybe strike a nerve, hmm?

      *Be honest: if you were a phisher, which person would you think is smarter, more Internet-savvy, and less likely to be sucked into your scheme: the person with the aol.com email address, or the person with the gmail.com email address?
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    17. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to say you're lying, but are you sure he didn't just move everything to AIM? I canceled my AOL account under the impression that AIM was separate from AOL. My two screen names and their corresponding AOL e-mail addresses were deleted without any prior notice. I had to create new screen names and e-mail addresses and then had to track down all my friends by memory (I never did remember a few of their screen names). You're saying he can still use his AOL info without paying for it?!

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
    18. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      Guess what; if it costs money to send your parents e-mail, certain organizations won't anymore.

      Dealing with AOL customers gets more and more onerous. Not because they are bad customers, but because AOL is such a pain in the ass.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    19. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Hosiah · · Score: 1
      I now incinerate any aol trial cds I get.

      True story: Just two days ago my daughter brought home a little goldfish mobil made in art class in school. Using guess-which CDs as the body! I'd heard of 1001 uses for AOL Cds before, but this was the first time I'd seen a school-sanctioned usage of AOHell data as bulk material. Gave me a warm, fuzzy feeling!

    20. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Belseth · · Score: 3, Funny
      Have you ever tried to cancel an AOL account?

      I found the best way was to cancel my bank account, change my name and move to a foreign country. They've tracked me down twice but I filed off my fingerprints this time and had plastic surgery so I'm hopeful. They only ones worse are Girl Scouts at cookie time and Jehova's Witnesses. Those I've had to learn to live with.

    21. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SHUT UP! SHUT UP! Get a life!

    22. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Mr. Blob,

      Your bill of $376,248.73 is past due. Please remit payment as soon as possible.

      Regards,

      AOL Billing Dept.

    23. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Evil+Pete · · Score: 3, Funny

      I once argued with some JWs who arrived on my doorstep. I argued evolution until they looked at their watches. Then when they tried to leave, I brought up another issue and argued some more ... and more ... and more....

      They never came back. Pity, I was just getting started.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    24. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by aonifer · · Score: 1

      You don't like how they access the net? Well, maybe I don't like the car you drive

      Dude! He's going to kill your car! Better say you like AOL!

    25. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Do I get a veto on you saying "frack"?

      (Seriously though, I completely agree with you)

    26. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mindshare? Isn't that one of the discredited metrics which sort of got thrown out just after the dot-com crash?

    27. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by mpcooke3 · · Score: 1

      Yeah my dad, when he went to complain to his bank the bank manager groaned and said "oh AOL always do this".

    28. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I signed up a while back for internet access while out of state, it took 3 months to get them to stop charging, initially they actually refused to unsubscribe me.

    29. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by MooUK · · Score: 1

      The one possible danger there is that they might go home and stick CDs that actually matter to things. However, that's not your problem; that's the parents. Or something.

    30. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how does charging for email fit in with google's (part owner of AOL) policy of not being evil?

    31. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey! Why offend my mom like that?

    32. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by just_another_sean · · Score: 1

      Brilliant! I'll never get ticked off at those guys again. Next time I beleive I will invite them in for tea.

      --
      Creationist Textbook Stickers Declared Unconstitutional by CowboyNeal
    33. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THEY ARE RIGHT TO USE AOL.

      No one is right to use AOL, no one.

      Nice troll, btw.

    34. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Bibliographer · · Score: 1
      If you live in a major city, DSL and cable modems are options. If you live in a small city you can generally get a cable modem, but not everyone can get DSL. If you live in a small town you can't get DSL and you might not be able to get a cable modem. If you live in a rural area you cannot get DSL and you cannot get a cable modem - you're generally stuck with dialup unless you live in an area that offers longrange 802.11. When you're stuck with dialup you want to minimize your phone charges. AOL has more dialup locations than other dialup services. The other services may be $10 less a month than AOL, but the associated phone charges could be $20 more a month than AOL - which is easy if your dialup node is a long distance charge.

      Sometimes AOL is the cheapest service to use.

    35. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by barcodeplane · · Score: 1

      Have you ever tried to uninstall AOL from a computer?

    36. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by DGregory · · Score: 1

      My grandparents and my in-laws are all the same way. I've repeated to them "you know, there are isp's out there for $10 a month" and they don't care. So if they don't care about that extra $10+ they're spending enough to allow me to help them move to something else, oh well, I'm not going to force them to change. They know there's something else cheaper and just as good, and if they want to change to save some money, they know my phone number.

    37. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Syberghost · · Score: 1

      Why the frack should they change? To please you?

      How about to get their email without interruption?

    38. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're propably people who still use software from Microsoft

    39. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by vertinox · · Score: 1

      I don't get a veto on your car, you don't get a veto on my parent's AOL.

      No, but the free market and government regulation do.

      At least I can't buy a car that takes leaded gasoline anymore nor can I use local BBS's for internet connection on a 2400 baud modem (not that I would want to). One being government regulated and other because something else in the free market killed it off.

      If the government outlaws AOL (for some uknown and improbable reason... maybe the CEO got caught for SEC violations or something) or AOL died off because MSN, Netzero, Telcoms and Earthlink did better for some uknown reason and put AOL in its grave... Then well... Your parents AOL has been vetoed.

      May I also mention that opinion does affect free markets and government opinion?

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    40. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > They only ones worse are Girl Scouts at cookie time and Jehova's Witnesses.
      > Those I've had to learn to live with.

      JWs are easy to get rid of. Just start quoting passages that deal with the deity of Christ (John 1 is good, or Hebrews 3-4) in the original Greek, and translating on the fly, explaining the nuances of the translation process as you go. ("You see, a word-for-word translation would read 'God was the Word' (or 'God was the Message'), but we know that logos is the subject because it is flagged with the article. Theos is placed foremost in the clause for emphasis, but it cannot have the article because it is the nominative, not the subject, and the absense of the article is necessary to place it in the predicate, since the same case is used for both in Greek, as in English. The equivalent in modern English would be to say 'The Word was GOD', with the Word first and 'God' emphasized somehow, perhaps with tone of voice or in boldface type, depending on the medium. We still wouldn't use the article on God, but for a different reason: in English we consider it to be a proper noun, like someone's name, and we don't use an article in that instance. Now, when we come to verse fourteen...") They go away, and they don't come back.

      Of course, this assumes your goal is to get rid of them. If they are standing at my door in we're-here-to-convert-you mode, that generally _is_ my goal.

      Somehow I have escaped ever having to deal with Girl Scouts, but in any case we bake our own cookies in my family.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    41. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by Misagon · · Score: 1

      I have also done that. It is fun and is a good deed. Because you are holding them back from harassing others, you are doing a service to your local community.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    42. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

      aol works for some people. they just don't care how much it costs and they don't see why something else is better.

      you can't use the "gmail is for true geeks" mentality anymore since it's now free to use for anyone with a cell phone (which means EVERY dumb college student) and hardly makes you special. there are some people with aol addresses who are actually quite savvy, but that's what their parents pay for.

      it comes down to this... there's absolutely no reason aol should be charging to be added to their whitelist and blocking any domains that don't pay.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    43. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by deadlinegrunt · · Score: 1

      A large number of people think AOL is _THE_ internet.
      A larger number of people think Windows is _THE_ computer.

      Mindshare is the effect you get when there are many options to choose from but only a limited subset of those options are recalled for purpose of selection. It may very well be a buzzword left over from the craziness of the dot.com era but its meaning is still valid in this context and still applies, regardless whether it is or is not a quality metric of purchase.

      --
      BSD is designed. Linux is grown. C++ libs
    44. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

      Not only invite them in for tea, but discuss the things that *they* want to talk about (this will take a long time)

      While you are earnestly talking with them, start removing your clothes, slowly, one item at a time.

      I once got down to undoing my pants before they left, and they've never bothered me again.

      --
      So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
    45. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      I've actually persuaded a couple different witnesses to take me out for beer. "Hey, if you take me out for some beer, I'll listen to what you have to say." They did it! Really freaked me out that it worked.

    46. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      you can't use the "gmail is for true geeks" mentality anymore since it's now free to use for anyone with a cell phone (which means EVERY dumb college student) and hardly makes you special. there are some people with aol addresses who are actually quite savvy, but that's what their parents pay for.
      Since when did reality ever stand in the way of public perception? It doesn't matter whether gmail users actually are smarter than AOL users; all that matters is that that's what most people (including spammers) think. As long as they continue to think that way (which they will, even long after the situation has changed) AOL users will still be targeted more than gmail users.

      Oh, and by the way: everybody's grandma has heard of AOL because they advertize on TV. People still do have to be a little proactive and savvy to realize that gmail exists, and that it might be worth switching away from their ISP email accounts for. In other words, just because the "invite only" bit ended, it doesn't make it completely equal to AOL.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    47. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by rizzo420 · · Score: 1

      funny... my gmail account gets spammed daily. looks like your theory is dead.

      --
      please me, have no regrets.
    48. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      Have you tried their new video-on-demand? You can find it on either AOL.com or through Winamp's GUI. It's pretty good!

    49. Re:Obvious Question but it needs to be asked... by murdocj · · Score: 1

      I'm tired of people who think they are better than someone else because of their knowledge of a particular technology. I'm tired of people whose only way of feeling big is by stepping on someone else. Who cares whether someone is a 50 year old housewife or a 19 year old snot-nosed kid? One of the most amazing people I know is a 96 year old great-grandmother.

  6. Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anouther reason to leave AOL and let it become "america's 2ed largest service provider"

  7. This reminds me... by garrett714 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...of when I was doing tech support for a DSL provider, and we had people that called that still used AOL alongside DSL. When informed that they didn't need to AOL software to access the internet anymore, they responded "We want to keep our AOL email address for our business."

    That made me laugh.

    1. Re:This reminds me... by funkmeister · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I thought it was bad enough to run across businesses using hotmale addresses. They should be ashamed of themselves!

    2. Re:This reminds me... by gkhan1 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Hotmale? As in Jude Law? Dude, i'd pay anything to recieve his white man-mail, if you know what i'm saying!

    3. Re:This reminds me... by AndyKron · · Score: 1

      Everytime I see a business with an AOL email address they lose credibility with me, just like people with the same. I see them as not very tech saavy.

      -AK

    4. Re:This reminds me... by vux984 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Everytime I see a business with an AOL email address they lose credibility with me, just like people with the same. I see them as not very tech saavy.

      Sure I'd blink if a web designer or network installer handed me a business card with an aol address.

      But is there a reason you demand 'tech savvy' from your butcher, baker, fishmonger, home daycare operator, pet groomer, the workshop down the road that rebuilds radiater cores, the local scrapyard, and so forth?

      And lets face it a lot of businesses did start with an aol address, and even if they don't need it anymore many do need to keep it around or risk losing a block of clients/contacts. They many not print it on their cards anymore, but they'll still have the AOL software around on their computers to be scoffed at by DSL tech support technicians :)

    5. Re:This reminds me... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Everytime I see a business with an AOL email address they lose credibility with me, just like people with the same. I see them as not very tech saavy.

      Is it a requirement for you that businesses must be "very tech saavy"? Even restaurants, maid services and chimney sweeps?

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    6. Re:This reminds me... by AcidLacedPenguiN · · Score: 3, Funny

      which is exactly why you just forward all mail from the @aol.com to the @imnothandicappedanymore.com inbox, and put the @imnothandicappedanymore.com on your business card, and then just 'can' the @aol.com after enough time has passed to justify doing so.

      --
      disclaimer: I've been known to store numbers in my ass for which to dig out when quantities are required.
    7. Re:This reminds me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Out of all the stupid questions I get from friends and family about their computer, it's never "my AOL doesn't work". Granted, AOL doesn't suit my purposes, but I don't really want to sit around training spamassassin for everybody I know who is obsessed with more important things than software. I WOULD rather have my bakers, mechanics, and doctors thinking about something other than which ISP they choose.

      That being said... I make the same judgement. And that's why we are all here together, posting on Slashdot.

    8. Re:This reminds me... by iainl · · Score: 1

      What's the requirement for you to contact your local chimney sweep by email, however?

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    9. Re:This reminds me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everytime I see a business with an AOL email address they lose credibility with me, just like people with the same. I see them as not very tech saavy.

      So you don't read Dilbert, because Scott Adams has an "@aol.com" e-mail addres? (Look between the panels of the strip).

    10. Re:This reminds me... by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1
      I thought it was bad enough to run across businesses using hotmale addresses.

      Here in Luxembourg, it's far worse. Here, the police used a hotmale address. Well, at least it keeps them busy, investigating how the hell their super sekrit email password got leaked...

    11. Re:This reminds me... by AndyKron · · Score: 1

      No, they don't have to be tech saavy, but if they want to tell me how to "surf the 'net", they shouldn't use an AOL address if they want me to listen. I've only been online since about 1995, and from experience, the people who cling to their AOL addresses aren't the people I ask technical questions to. I also wouldn't hire a lawyer with an AOL address, or any other business that doesn't have their own domain name. It's just smart business to me. I should have made myself more clear in my comment. My bad. -AK

    12. Re:This reminds me... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      WTF? I'll just call him. Sheesh.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  8. Fine by me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just wont send any email to AOL or Yahoo users.

  9. well... by awing0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I never knew talking to AOL members was a privilege worth paying for.

    --
    Cthulhu Saves.
    1. Re:well... by The+Amazing+Fish+Boy · · Score: 4, Funny

      me too!

    2. Re:well... by xstonedogx · · Score: 0, Redundant

      LOL!

    3. Re:well... by wholecake · · Score: 0

      AO LOL!

    4. Re:well... by metalligoth · · Score: 4, Funny

      Spammers will pay to talk to AOL users because AOL users will obviously pay for anything.

    5. Re:well... by alan.briolat · · Score: 1

      Thats one of those borderline between Funny and Insightful comments. Unfortunately, its very true - AOL users are the perfect people to target with spam, because the average AOL user is the kind that will click any link and run any attachment in an e-mail. So yes, its worth the spammers paying for thise "priviledge" because they will most likely get a better clickthrough rate with those than with users of any other single provider.

      --
      I swear we should be allowed to give mod points to sigs... "-1, Offtopic"
    6. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *g*
      anyway, now we've got a perfect Kill-line for
      our favorite mailinglist-software...
      This should reduce traffic *a lot* :-)

      P.S: wouldn't it be great if mailinglist-software really
      had a Kill-feature? ;-p

    7. Re:well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Silly mods. The redundancy is part of the joke.

  10. Good thing its _A_OL by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 5, Informative

    Reading their Sender Qualifications indicates you European emailers are pretty much screwed:

    Accreditation Criteria
    In order to meet the strict qualifying criteria, an organization must, among other things:

      - have at least 1 year of business history, as verified by a commercial identity verification service
    - ***have business headquarters located in the United States or Canada ***

    etc...

    1. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by rawwa.venoise · · Score: 1

      actaully it's the opposite. Why should i use AOL when i got better alternatives?
      Unless i have to do business with people on AOL, but then i thnk people will start to charge this extra fee on the service anyway, so those AOL user's will always pay for it ...

    2. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by aussie_a · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Why would Australia On Line require people to have business headquarters in America or Canada? That's screwy if you ask me.

    3. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      In case you weren't aware, AOL does offer service in other countries.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    4. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh wow, you're so funny.

    5. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's only a formalising of an old policy. When they first introduced the white/blacklists, they blacklisted all dialup and residential DSL IP addresses. And most of Europe. Thousands of ISPS lost the ability to send email to AOL overnight, and it was maddening trying to find out why. At the time, I was working in IT support, and all of our customers suddenly couldn't send to AOL. In the end, it turned out that the whole Demon ADSL IP range (a large ISP, primarily used by businesses) had been added to the blacklists because of a few spam zombies in the residential range. I managed to persuade Demon to pass on their home/business range info to to AOL and get the issue sorted, but it took about 2 weeks from start to finish.

      This is only going to cause worse problems.

    6. Re:Good thing its _A_OL by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      That whooshing sound you hear is his point going right over your head...

  11. Yeah, right! by n6kuy · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I think this post was made 2 months minus a day too early...

    --
    If you disagree with me on social issues, then it's pretty clear that you are a narrow-minded bigot.
  12. Will make the problem worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The most annoying spam I get are from real well-known companies (i.e. microsoft, etc; who wants me to pay them more for being a "partner" to participate in marketing programs, etc -- which isn't goign to happen until they pay me to be in my partner program).

    So with Goodmail big companies can buy their way into an inbox, but the occasionally interesting message I get from all these colorful characters in Nigeria won't get through. (at least they're fun to read)

    That sucks.

  13. Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The headline makes it sound like AOL will be charging all senders a fee to deliver mail to AOL customers. TFA seems to say that the charge is only to be certified to send high volume email, like mailing lists or legit bulk mail (ie spam from somewhat reputable companies). Another /. headline making a mountain out of a molehill. You'd think with the way people used to bitch about MS FUD around here all the time, this stuff would be a bit less common.

    1. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by DaveJay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      TFA seems to say that the charge is only to be certified to send high volume email, like mailing lists or legit bulk mail (ie spam from somewhat reputable companies).

      So if I sign up for a mailing list operated by a not-for-profit support group for, let's say, Parkinson's Disease -- and that mailing list has thousands of members -- the not-for-profit support group has to pay?

      That doesn't strike you as a bad thing?

    2. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by thrillseeker · · Score: 4, Interesting
      TFA seems to say that the charge is only to be certified to send high volume email, like mailing lists or legit bulk mail (ie spam from somewhat reputable companies). Another /. headline making a mountain out of a molehill.

      Those of us who manage free high-volume mailing lists will be removing aol addresses from those lists - we'll see if your statement that it's only slashdot making a mountain out of a molehill becomes truth.

    3. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by tacocat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Agreed.

      I suppose you could always try the alternative tactic of charging each AOL customer a fee based on your transaction costs plus the overhead to track the costs for each email delivered to AOl in addition to each email send from AOL

      But it just occurred to me. AOL won't care. They push BLOGS not LISTS. If everything is on blogs for discussions then there isn't much else to do. That and there's the added plus for AOL in that they can more readily manage your content to make sure you comply with their AUP. You see email can't easily be recalled.

    4. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by aussie_a · · Score: 1, Insightful

      TFA seems to say that the charge is only to be certified to send high volume email, like mailing lists or legit bulk mail (ie spam from somewhat reputable companies)

      No, it doesn't sound like it required reputable companies to sign up. Merely those who are willing to pay a fee to avoid spam detectors in order to spam people. There's no legit spam, no matter how what your congress-critters who have sold you out say.

    5. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by phoebe · · Score: 1

      Not that misleading, you don't have to bulk email to be affected. Say you have a company in Hong Kong and send less than a thousand emails a month to clients with Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, etc addresses, your mail is pretty much guaranteed to be marked as spam. To sign up with Bonded Sender or Habeas is about $100 per month, not exactly a cost effective choice just to keep a corporate vanity domain, and another good reason to sign up for a free US service like gmail. Paying per email helps bring certified email to more users, as it lowers the cost significantly for low volume senders, but the head quarter location limitation is a rather harsh restriction.

      One wonders if Google should sell its spam service to other venders, it allows Asian email and appears to do a better job then Hotmail and Yahoo.

    6. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      let's say, Parkinson's Disease -- and that mailing list has thousands of members -- the not-for-profit support group has to pay? That doesn't strike you as a bad thing?

      Or perhaps the recipients could leave AOL. And that for sure doesn't strike me as a bad thing.

    7. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That doesn't strike you as a bad thing?

      Nope, it doesn't. There are lots of technologies that allow you to deliver content to users automatically. You need look no further than yahoo groups as an example - users can send an email to the group and it will be posted to the group website. Those who so choose can set the group to email them, and others can check it through the website.

      There are other technologies that can allow people to automatically get updates without using email - like rss. Spam is a ridicuously high volume of email, and I have no problem whatsoever forcing people to switch to better suited technologies to help cut down on junk mail. It's not exactly like the non-profit mailing list is a very major part of modern internet usage.

    8. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Yeah, because free high volume mailing lists are such a huge part of internet usage, especially to the average AOL subscriber. It IS a mountain out of a molehill, because the headline makes it sound like every email sent to any AOL user will cost money, and in fact it's going to affect only a TINY percentage of the members.

      Maybe you, as a mailing list administrator, should think about implementing a better solution for delivering content to lots of people?

    9. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Mike+Savior · · Score: 1

      The thing is, is that while -you- might want to be on the mailing list, why isn't AOL allowed to assume that your subscription is in the name of a disease that could easily be used as a subject medium for an email scam? It's a machine reading your mail, not them, so they can just make a broad generalization and throw in a generic string on the filter machines until the organization -does- pay.

      Not that it matters though, it is AOL after all.

      --
      space is pretty cool.
    10. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      There's no legit spam

      Sure there is. Some people like knowing what sales are going on at their favorite stores. Some people (gasp) even buy newspapers specifically for all the sale circulars inside. Just because YOU think spam is the root of all evil doesn't mean all people do. There are an awful lot of opt-in commercial mailing lists that people are interested in. One of the requirements to be accepted by AOL's new system is an EASY OPT-OUT.

    11. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      Another thing - these emails will simply be put in the junk folder. If your mailing list is THAT important to you, I bet adding the address to your contacts will automagically whitelist it for you and keep it out of the junk folder.

    12. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by thrillseeker · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Maybe you, as a mailing list administrator, should think about implementing a better solution for delivering content to lots of people?

      Nope. They're private mailing lists, not piece of crap blogs.

    13. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by rhendershot · · Score: 1

      You mention blogs and RSS as alternatives (which don't address the core point about *email*, btw). So, have you ever tried to .forward RSS? Or do any kind of an index search on a blog?

      You'd want to replace a bursty, short-windowed protocol with a recurring, high-overhead alternative? A remote alternative at that? God, the backbone carriers that are making so much noise about charging for traffic must love you....

      -rsh

      ps- spam, besides being characterized as unsolicited IMHO, includes all emails that contain a body full of external links... links that do no good when offline, and can take an age to load. Seems like the servers they point to *always* have limited bandwidth.

    14. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by RollingThunder · · Score: 1

      Indeed, I'm wondering if I'm going to have to just tell everyone on the mailing lists I run that if they're on AOL, that I don't want to hear complaints that they don't get their listmail anymore.

      It doesn't look like this is going to be a binary "you pay or no luck" thing though, but I suspect it'll notch the mail my server sends a couple steps higher on the spam scale, causing more false positives.

    15. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In response to your sig. It's the idea expressed that's important. If you get caught up on simple grammer mistakes then you miss the point. Who cares as long as it's understood and most people undertand even though the mistakes is clear. fuck off. grammer bitch.

    16. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Hosiah · · Score: 0
      people used to bitch about MS FUD

      I *like* MS FUD. I jerk off too it.

    17. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Reziac · · Score: 1

      From TFA, I got the impression that this applies only to large commercial senders.

      If there was no way for AOLers to receive free mailing lists without the list owner jumping thru hoops/paying thru the nose, methinks the screams from AOLers themselves would nix such a scheme in a hurry. So I expect anything the individual AOLer has whitelisted would be exempt (frex, free mailing lists).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    18. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Kelson · · Score: 1

      Those of us who manage free high-volume mailing lists will be removing aol addresses from those list

      Why? According to TFA they aren't going to charge you to send them mail, they're going to charge you to be on their enhanced whitelist.

      Let's look at this with an airport metaphor: They're charging people to get in the VIP line. (Or, more precisely, they're letting someone else charge to do the background checks and put you on the VIP list.) If you don't pay, you stand in the normal line, with the normal security measures. You'll still make your flight, as long as you're not carrying a nail file.

      OK, maybe the airport metaphor wasn't the best choice...

    19. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1
      Well, if somebody explicitly consented to receive the mail, and they can unsubscribe if they want, then it's not spam, is it?

      Your free iPod sig, on the other hand... :)

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    20. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by SilentOneNCW · · Score: 1

      Did you actually get an iPod? How long did it take? How much did it cost? Is it worth it?

    21. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'll be modded to hell for this one, but I've got karma to burn. The basic process is you sign up for some trial of a service - some trials are free and some cost money. For the mac mini offer, I did a month trial of blockbuster online (which costs 15 bucks a month). I ended up keeping the service because I liked it, but you can cancel your trial after you get credit for it. Of course, some companies are a pain in the ass to cancel, keeping you waiting on hold and all that annoying crap. Then you refer people to sign up, and if they sign up for a trial too, you get credit. Get enough referrals and you get the item in question. I have gotten two so far - an ipod shuffle (3 referrals) and an ipod video (5 referrals). The mac mini requires TEN referrals (ick). The shuffle took around a month of leaving the link in my /. and email sigs to collect the referrals, the ipod video took significantly longer. But I didn't really DO anything to promote the links, just left them attached to messages. I've had friends very agressively pimp their links and get all their referrals in a week or three. You can figure on another couple of weeks to a month after you complete the process before they get around to sending you the ipod, though.

      To me, I didn't really do anything, ended up with a netflix alternative that I really like, and have a video ipod. That's worth it in my book.

    22. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      So, you want Yahoo to pay for the emails instead of the non-profit? I can see how this helps... Even more when Yahoo starts billing the non-profit to send the messages (or do you think they'll do that for free?).

    23. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      No, Yahoo can send emails to those who are able to get them, and the limited few who would be affected by AOL's policy are free to check the news via the website. If they don't like it, they can leave AOL. It's a much better solution than mailing list administrators crying that they will take their ball and go home.

    24. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by kwalker · · Score: 1

      With the banner ads I see in Yahoo Groups and at the end of Group e-mails, I have no problem with them paying to send e-mail. I mean, are they an Internet company or not?

      --
      ... And so it comes to this.
    25. Re:Another misleading headline... big shocker by kwalker · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well then you can do the tech support to get my father, mother, sister-in-law, and Grandmother to use RSS, groups, etc.

      --
      ... And so it comes to this.
  14. I hope there's a patent... by bennomatic · · Score: 0
    ...that I can break.

    I think that the time for sender-postage-paid email has come. It's the only solution that has any significant chance of really killing SPAM. Make it cheap enough so that poor people can still send email, and so that businesses don't bring down the hammer on employees sending personal email, but make it expensive enough that a SPAMmer can't send out a million emails without feeling the pinch.

    Free email is dead; long live free email!

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
    1. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You Personally advocate a

      ( ) technical ( ) legislative (x) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      (x) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      (x) Users of email will not put up with it
      ( ) Microsoft will not put up with it
      ( ) The police will not put up with it
      ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      (x) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      ( ) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) Asshats
      (x) Jurisdictional problems
      (x) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      (x) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      (x) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      ( ) Extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      (x) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      (x) Whitelists suck
      ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      (x) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      (x) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

    2. Re:I hope there's a patent... by grasspicker · · Score: 1

      I guess this is one case where buying in bulk is not to your advantage.

    3. Re:I hope there's a patent... by PaintyThePirate · · Score: 1

      The purpose of postage on snail mail is not to prevent a deluge of junk mail from filling citizens mailboxes (that happens anyway). It is to subsidize the delivery of mail. A tax on email would be idiotic and unnecessary. The solution is actually pretty simple. Spam filters have gotten widespread and accurate enough that spam is no longer really a problem for the average end user. While it is still a strain on mail servers, bandwidth is getting quicker and cheaper every day.

    4. Re:I hope there's a patent... by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > ...make it expensive enough that a SPAMmer can't send out a million
      > emails without feeling the pinch.

      And so that noncommercial mailing lists cannot exist at all.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    5. Re:I hope there's a patent... by swilde23 · · Score: 1

      Or another potential solution (in line with your spam filter concept) is to actually start enforcing the RCFs on mail servers. Sure it won't stop the real spam (the stuff companies are sending out from their computers... i.e. the stuff that is relatively easy to block), but it sure would help out with all the unintentional spam (i.e. virus infected "personal computers"/"spam factories")

      No I won't punch a hole in our firewall so your friend can send us email. If your friend would get their act together and actually read the docs then we wouldn't be having this conversation... /cry

      --
      There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand this sig, and those that beat up people who do.
    6. Re:I hope there's a patent... by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The problem is that most anti-spam filtering systems also block an unknown (and unknowable) amount of email. When this happens at the ISP level, the user generally has no recourse and no way to even find out that the mail has been blocked.

      Email is now utterly unreliable for anything except personal correspondence. It is no longer practical for any business communication to customers - especially things like confirmations and receipts.

      This situation has been brought on by both spammers and vigilante anti-spammers.

    7. Re:I hope there's a patent... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I think that the time for sender-postage-paid email has come. It's the only solution that has any significant chance of really killing SPAM.

      Yeah, 'cause nobody ever gets junk snail mail!

      This idea's been around for a long time and it's just silly. If someone has to jump through hoops to send me email, I would rather they do something sensible, like get their public key signed by someone I trust rather than just proving the have access to five cents.

      There are other major problems as well. Like what is I want to send out an anonymous email containing evidence of Ashcroft himself torturing "terror suspects". It's REALLY easy to trace money and the evidence is kept around for a long time.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    8. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I completely disagree. The solution to spam is legislation and enforcement. Spam is fundamentally a social problem, not a technical problem (although spam has certainly pointed out many technical problems, some of which have been corrected).

      Spam exists because 1) it's profitable to send spam, because somebody will pay you send spam on their behalf or because a small percentage of your victims will buy whatever crap you're peddling, and 2) you probably won't be arrested, convicted, and hauled off to prison. Change these, and spam will stop, because it will no longer be profitable and safe.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    9. Re:I hope there's a patent... by MustardMan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Man, it's too bad there's not a really easy method to publish information in such a way that a bunch of people can easily get automatically notified when a new item is added. That would be sweet. I think I'm going to invent such a system. I'll call it Really Sweet System.

    10. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Have you ever actually hosted an RSS feed? Imagine 50,000 people hitting your server for 50K every five minutes (or sooner, because they can't figure out how to configure they're software). Sure, that's doable, but a hell of a lot more expensive than a one-shot mailing list.

    11. Re:I hope there's a patent... by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Holy crap, why do I always use up my last mod point right before finding something so deserving?

      Well done!

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    12. Re:I hope there's a patent... by earthbound+kid · · Score: 1

      Set up your RSS feed right, so that they know it only updates once a week. Duh.

    13. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Inoshiro · · Score: 1

      "Yeah, 'cause nobody ever gets junk snail mail!"

      That may be true, but I've never paid for junk snail mail. There's economic incentive to not send me shit I don't care about!!

      Do you care about penis englargement? Fake degrees from non-existant, non-acredited institutions? Drugs that are not legal yet in your country since they haven't passed testing? I've never had junk snail mail for it. I also don't have ~200 junk snail mails a day attempting to be delivered to my mailbox.

      --
      --
      Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
    14. Re:I hope there's a patent... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      First off, I get about 50 spams a day to 10 legitimate email. My spamfilter has almost 100% accuracy. And I do check it.

      Google for "dspam".

      Even with legitimate email, sorting mailing lists into separate folders, for instance, is a good thing, because I can skim through a lot of it, knowing (mostly) what it's about. The same is true of spam -- it'd be a nightmare sorting the 50/10 by myself, but I can usually skim through a bunch of spam subjects looking for the ones that look legitimate.

      Will someone please fill out the checkboxes fo dspam? I'd like to know why so few people actually use it.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    15. Re:I hope there's a patent... by WhyCause · · Score: 1
      Yeah, 'cause nobody ever gets junk snail mail!

      You know what's kind of funny, I don't get junk snail mail anymore.

      Of course, there was some... unpleasantness that caused some levee breaches, some flooding of the mail-sorting equipment, and some Post Masters halting delivery of such things. But, hey, no more junk mail!

      Of course, my wife doesn't get her magazines anymore either, which is a pain.

    16. Re:I hope there's a patent... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Must we go through this again?

        You Personally advocate a

      ( ) technical (x) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      ( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      ( ) Users of email will not put up with it
      (x) Microsoft will not put up with it
      (x) The police will not put up with it
      ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      ( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      ( ) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      (x) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) Asshats
      (x) Jurisdictional problems
      ( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      ( ) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      (x) Extreme profitability of spam
      (x) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      (x) Technically illiterate politicians
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      (x) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      (x) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      ( ) Whitelists suck
      (x) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      ( ) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      (x) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    17. Re:I hope there's a patent... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      And they abuse it anyway, and you can't send updates more than once a week, and they'll get annoyed if you do it less than once a week.

      Sorry, but RSS is broken by design as a "feed". It's interesting in other ways, but I'll send my updates by email.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    18. Re:I hope there's a patent... by thrillseeker · · Score: 1
      I've never paid for junk snail mail

      Actually you do. Bulk rate postage is subsidized by first class mail, and you have no way to stop it (your tax dollars at work).

    19. Re:I hope there's a patent... by oldwolf13 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but I think this is a horrible idea. Off the bat I'm against paying for any kind of traffic... I mean, why should I pay to connect to a server for a couple seconds, but cam browse the web all day for free?

      All these schemes to rob the net users of more money (micropayments, preferred traffic, etc) is just bullshit, and should not be incouraged. ...and with all the information companies keep online that gets stolen, why would I want yet another possibly irresponsible person with my CC or paypal information? As it is right now, I won't use anything that requires online payments, as I just don't trust them anymore.

      Spam is a big problem, and has almost ruined email, but this is not the solution.

      If greedy domain name registrars would not let these idiots register 400 domains at a time, and instead had a better system of verifying who they are sold to, then maybe it wouldn't be so bad. This also has me worried... in 5-10 years, what domains are going to be left that are recognizable, and not already used? Hell I don't want to register 12dewgt43.com because all these idiots have taken most of the words in the english dictionary.

      I used to own the domain "aesirstudios.com", but had to let it go due to financial troubles, and now someone else is sitting on it who has NOTHING to do with the name. This is ridiculous. Someone just saw that it was once and active domain, so they grabbed it to try to blackmail me in the future to buy it back.

      END RANT.

      --
      If I can't smoke and swear I'm fucked.
    20. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy crap, you must be new here.

      It's a goodie, but an oldie. Timeless.

    21. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Matt+Perry · · Score: 1

      Doesn't anyone check the last option?

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    22. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone needs to attempt to come up with an anti-spam measure that ALL of those will apply to.

    23. Re:I hope there's a patent... by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm rather old here, and have not ever seen it. Still quite a good one though.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    24. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Adam9 · · Score: 1
    25. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected

      Not if spam is defined well enough, which I admit is a non-trivial problem.

      (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money

      See the SpamHaus ROKSO list. Finding them isn't the problem.

      (x) Microsoft will not put up with it

      Microsoft has already been pursuing legal action against spammers. They're on our side here. Spam costs Hotmail a hell of a lot of money.

      (x) The police will not put up with it

      This is true, until Congress earmarks funding for it. Sorry, I forgot to specifically mention this requirement in my post.

      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email

      Legal action doesn't require central authority over e-mail, it only requires authority over the spammer.

      (x) Open relays in foreign countries

      I shouldn't have said technical solutions are not the answer. Technical solutions are part of the answer. We're already using technical solutions to deal with this problem (RBLs).

      (x) Asshats

      Have something specific in mind?

      (x) Jurisdictional problems

      The majority of spammers are in the United States, and foreign governments have agreed to collaborate on this problem (I can't find a link now, but it was mentioned on Slashdot).

      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes

      Who controls the armies? Those are the people that would be targeted.

      (x) Extreme profitability of spam

      Huge fines or jail time would make spam far less profitable.

      (x) Joe jobs and/or identity theft

      Yeah, maybe. If a spammer can make it look like their spam came from an innocent party, that could be a problem.

      (x) Technically illiterate politicians You got me on this one.

      (x) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves That's part of why what they're doing is illegal.

      (x) Outlook Has nothing to do with this.

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical Nobody has allocated funding for it on the scale that would be required.

      (x) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation Sorry, but I don't agree.

      (x) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored Absolutely; this is one of the areas where technical solutions have trouble, but a legislative solution would work fine.

      (x) I don't want the government reading my email They wouldn't have to.

      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough As I understand it, jail is pretty slow.

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work. If it doesn't, I'd be interested to see exactly why, and then go from there.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    26. Re:I hope there's a patent... by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Oh not that I disbelieved you at all, if I tried to read everything here I'd never get anything done. (Wait...do I anyway?)

      Slow down cowboy!

      It's been 1 minute since you last successfully posted a comment.

      Chances are, you are behind a firewall or proxy, or are typing with both hands. Please try again. If the problem persists, please try typing with your thumb up your ass.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    27. Re:I hope there's a patent... by AlexV · · Score: 1

      It's good, but it's not good enough. You have to be skilled to set it up well to start with, and the skimming through spam subjects looking for false positives is a problem too. You requested the checkboxes, here they are:

      You Personally advocate a

      (x) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      ( ) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      ( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      ( ) Users of email will not put up with it
      ( ) Microsoft will not put up with it
      ( ) The police will not put up with it
      ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      ( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      ( ) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      ( ) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      ( ) Asshats
      ( ) Jurisdictional problems
      ( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      ( ) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      ( ) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      (x) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      ( ) Extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      ( ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      (x) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      ( ) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      ( ) Whitelists suck
      (x) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      ( ) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      ( ) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

    28. Re:I hope there's a patent... by Mark+Shewmaker · · Score: 1
      The problem is that most anti-spam filtering systems also block an unknown (and unknowable) amount of email.
      That IMHO would represent a serious misconfiguration of an email filtering system.

      When a mailserver receives an incoming message attempt, it should accept the mail for delivery or reject it. If it accepts it for delivery and then later decides not to deliver the message, it should bounce the mail. (*)

      IMHO, it is in no case acceptable for the incoming mailserver to claim that it's accepting an email for delivery, and then just silently drop the message.

      (That's like a company mailroom signing for a package on your behalf, then throwing the package away without telling anyone. Saying that "email" is unreliable is like saying that "FedEx" is unreliable because some mail rooms throw away FedEx packages after signing for them.)

      Anyone whose ISP or corporate mailserver is doing that should IMHO complain to their ISP or their IT department. At the very least, instead of saying things like "email is unreliable", folks should in that situation say the truth using statements such as "our corporate email system is unreliable."

      This situation has been brought on by both spammers and vigilante anti-spammers.
      Or moreso by confused admins who don't comprehend the importance of safely rejecting emails so that legitimate senders will know there was a problem.

      (*) Of course, nowadays it's a good idea to do these sorts of anti-spam or anti-forgery tests during the SMTP connection if at all possible, so that you don't contribute to bounce-spam.

  15. welcome to Gmail! by sonamchauhan · · Score: 5, Insightful
    1. Re:welcome to Gmail! by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sign up for Gmail using SMS - this lets them limit the number of accounts per cell phone number

  16. uhh by akhomerun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    isn't this in a sense like selling out your own subscribers.

    i.e. they don't like that the spammers are spamming, but if they are willing to pay them, then they really don't care?

    that's why even free mail services beat out AOL (especially GMail) because they just try to filter out everything as spam.

    If you're going to pay double the price of other dial up companies, shouldn't you get spam-less email? How can Netzero/Netscape ISP/PeoplePC afford to take in $10 a month and somehow paying $23 for AOL means not even getting the most basic of spam filters. $23 is approaching low-speed DSL rates.

    1. Re:uhh by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 1

      $23 is only $2 less than I pay for really fast DSL (3.0 Mbps/768 kbps) from Verizon. (It's a $30 plan, minus a $5 discount because I get their phone service too. Quite a nice deal, and fast. But they block port 80.)

    2. Re:uhh by Cobol+God · · Score: 1

      HEY! You try sending out 500 gazillion CDs a year and see how much you have to charge, eh!

      Actually I used AOL when it was the only way to get online and they only had 2 phone #s in the entire state which were of course long distance. :) I think it is a great way to start to learn to get online (it is easy to find things to do/email with AOL). Just some people never move on.

      AOL is expensive because it tries to have too much AOL only content. It has deals with content providers for AOL only exclusives which have no real value but are a nice bandwith waster. :) Plus the person who ran the broadband division of AOL told everyone below that broadband was dead and dialup was the future. So AOL broadband never really got a chance to be different than dialup. It is a dinosaur but at least it is a colourful one?!?

    3. Re:uhh by afidel · · Score: 1

      I too used AOL when it was the only game in town. Before the local ISP started up in 1993 AOL was the only way other than through the Cleveland Public Libraries text terminals for me to get online. Of course by the time my free month was up I realized that just the long distance charges for my free month was the same as 3 months with the recently started ISP. I was with them for almost 10 years before they got gobbled up by a MUCH more sucky company and I moved to cable instead of DSL.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    4. Re:uhh by Cobol+God · · Score: 1

      3 months eh? I remember getting a $1,500.00 + phone bill for long distance charges... makes ANY ISP look good. Then again there were NO other ISP locally for almost 2 years after AOL.

    5. Re:uhh by niXcamiC · · Score: 1

      Where I used to live (Saskatchewan) low end dsl is around $9 canadian a month, thats about $6usd. You could also get 5meg down/1 meg up cable for like $50cdn a month.

      --
      Chances are any disscution on Slashdot will degrade into a flamewar about ID/Christianity within 14 posts.
    6. Re:uhh by Ark42 · · Score: 1

      $23 is a full $10 higher than the new AT&T/SBC DSL 1.5M/384K package now it looks like: http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/71751

    7. Re:uhh by oldwolf13 · · Score: 1

      Not in beautiful British Columbia... mine basically costs $40 a month (I bought the modem or it'd be $5 more), but they have a lesser package for maybe $20 a month. that's the cheapest.

      This is through TELUS. They recently (I think) added an enhanced dsl package, but I can't find the difference between that and regular... anyone know?

      Telus used to be great, 5 ips, run as many servers as you like, no port blocking. Now they're getting to be one of the worst. I can't switch to cable because Shaw isn't in this one municipality out here. Delta Cable is (DCCNET) and they're the biggest bandwidth nazis around. You go one meg over the limit (which even years ago was 10 gigs a month) and you paid. A lot. Telus at least doesn't seem to care how much I go over.

      --
      If I can't smoke and swear I'm fucked.
    8. Re:uhh by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Spammers will not live long on Goodmail, therefore your analogies are wrong.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    9. Re:uhh by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's higher, but the service is twice as fast.

    10. Re:uhh by Ark42 · · Score: 1

      Well it looks like the new price for 3.0M is $18, which is $5 less than AOL, and doesn't tie up the phone line.

    11. Re:uhh by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 1

      You mean from Verizon or from AT&T/SBC? Because if that's from AT&T I'll be pissed.

    12. Re:uhh by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 1

      Never mind... the $18 is only a one-year promotional price, then it jumps to $36. And I got a similar deal with Verizon, it was something like $10 off first three months or something. Shorter and less, but mine's still cheaper in the long run. And it doesn't have a 2-year contract.

    13. Re:uhh by Ark42 · · Score: 1

      I don't know how Verizon is because I live in AT&T-SBC-Ameritech land, but with SBC, the "promotional" prices as almost *always* for the full year that the "contract" is for. There is no two year contracts, only one year, and you can call in at any time during the contract, and re-up for the current rate, it will just reset your contract year to start from the point you called in.

      And the way the prices have always gone so far, at the end of each year, the new "promotional" rate is lower than last years, so nobody ever really goes to the "real" rate. Even if they say the rate is for new customers only, they have so far *always* let existing customers call in and re-rate. Sometimes it is just the first week of the promotion that they don't want to overload the call centers with existing customers calls, but they've always allowed it shortly after.

  17. Won't be a problem by jmorris42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This won't be a problem. Just means more gmail accounts. Seriously, someone sent me an invite over a year ago, I created an account and don't use it much yet. But it has had ZERO spams which is more than I can say for my Yahoo! account that gets em and all I use it for is system testing.

    AOL is dying anyway, which is why they no longer have the resources to fight spam and are instead outsourcing it.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Won't be a problem by 1000101 · · Score: 1

      "I created an account and don't use it much yet. But it has had ZERO spams"

      You have zero spam because you haven't used it and because the bots haven't generated your email address yet. I'm guessing your gmail address isn't john@gmail.com or janice@gmail.com. Gmail isn't immune to spam, it just catches more and throws it in your junk mail folder more efficiently with less false-positives. In the past week, I have received mail from Irene Leila (She wants to fuck me apparently), Saundra Gore (She wants to talk about competitive conjecture jovanovich pharmacist), and Tami Travis (I guess she thinks I have a short dick).

    2. Re:Won't be a problem by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > You have zero spam because you haven't used it and because the bots haven't generated your
      > email address yet.

      But I use both as just test addresses for troubleshooting mail delivery problems and just to have an address offsite. The point was Yahoo! started getting spam so fast I'd swear they were selling the addresses themselves like the postal service. Gmail is still at zero. And I'm not all that creative, I tend towards the same LHS.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    3. Re:Won't be a problem by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


          I forward a copy of all my mail to GMail. Their spam filtering works pretty well.

          On the other hand, the mail that lands in my local box is filtered just as well, using MailScanner with SpamAssassin.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  18. wow by bLindmOnkey · · Score: 1

    You mean AOL is going to piss off loyal users of crap software who don't know better by making their software crappier and charging people for it? Yep, sounds like AOHELL alright.

  19. False Alarm, but Still by RobertF · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Okay, first reading it I thought that AOL actually had the audacity to charge maillist senders per email so that the email wouldn't get junked. But reading the article, it seems they are talking about enabling links and images when viewing an email (which a user can do manually). But still, the idea that they would do this (An Email Tarrif almost) is ridiculous. All under the guise of "protecting users from spam". Puh-lease.

    --
    And that, my liege, is how we know the Earth to be bannana-shaped.
    1. Re:False Alarm, but Still by TomTraynor · · Score: 1

      Protecting their clients from spam, unless of course they get their cut of the action. They figure if the spammers can make money they should be getting a bit of that too, if you don't pay AOL then too bad.

      --
      Panic now, beat the rush!
  20. What do they consider "bulk"? by Grail · · Score: 1

    I suppose the main concern I have with this system is AOL's idea of "bulk" - will opt-in mailing lists end up being considered bulk traffic?

    1. Re:What do they consider "bulk"? by snarlydwarf · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Under their existing policies, 1 piece of email is bulk.

      (I'm not kidding: I've had this runaround with them when an AOL user clicked "this is spam" on a personalized mail with pictures of a wedding... 1 piece of mail if it generates a complaint, is not only spam, it's "bulk".)

    2. Re:What do they consider "bulk"? by shark72 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, opt-in lists are bulk. I had to jump through lots of hoops to get onto AOL's whitelist program just so that people who sign up to my web sites can get their confirmation email.

      Once I got on it, it was fine (unlike Hotmail, which randomly drops emails on the floor, to the chagrin of my customers). We get a surprising number of AOL users who mistake the "this is spam" button for the "delete" button, but apparently not in large enough quantities to get us de-listed.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    3. Re:What do they consider "bulk"? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


          I have a friend, who sends a good bit of mail. It's all 100% legitimate.

          One of the messages worked it's way through SpamCop, and ended up in my lap. I looked. It was an email saying that their online purchase hadn't gone through, and was requesting that they call with a different form of payment. I called the developer for fun, and she looked up the transaction. Yes, it had been placed online, and no the charge hadn't gone through (invalid card number)

          We actually got an apology from the user. They simply flag everything in their box, and report it as spam. They didn't realize that a real message may come through.

          At least at SpamCop, they're good about handling them. AOL, you're blacklisted until .... well .... you already know.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  21. Damn. I like Yahoo, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "...Yahoo is expected to follow down the same path."

    Goodbye, Yahoo. You have too many competing outfits to be pulling this crap on your customers.

    Buncha greedy shits up on the top floor.

  22. Talk about a misleading title.... by uiucryan · · Score: 1

    This title is quite misleading.....
    Just RTFA before getting upset!

  23. Who cares? by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bulk emailers on one hand and AOLers on the other? Let them have each other.

  24. It's for "Commercial e-mail senders", not everyone by BarnabyWilde · · Score: 1

    ...although there isn't much to describe how that distinction is made. You would assume it's by the volume of mail sent.

    How would this work with zombie mailers that don't meet the threshold for "commercial e-mail senders"?

    BWilde.

  25. Charging for incoming email? by courtarro · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or does there seem to be an increase in terribly misleading headlines on /. lately? AOL isn't charging for all incoming mail, they're charging commercial emailers to send email to AOL users. As far as I can tell, AOL is a dying breed whose users won't really notice the difference, and are probably used to service problems anyway.

    1. Re:Charging for incoming email? by garrett714 · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or does there seem to be an increase in terribly misleading headlines on /. lately?

      I totally agree with you. But whenever I voice my opinion about it, or the quality of stories on the front page, I get modded offtopic or troll...

      /. is a great site and all but I think some of the mods need to be bitch slapped.

  26. How is this to stop spam/phishing? by iSeal · · Score: 1

    Honestly, maybe about 1% of my spam contains links or images. The rest use something called "text" to get their spam-riddled message through, and a written address a la "http://www.something.com" (which is parsed anyways). AOL will still let those through. It'll just block images/links (but not written out addresses).

    So I say again: how will this stop spam? The only thing I can see this do is making it a pain for non-profit entities to send mailing lists (schools, charities, orchestras, etc.), and making a quick buck of legitimate companies who want to send legitimate messages to subscribers.

    Don't get me wrong: I'm 100% against spam. I just don't think this is an effective manner in any way to stop it. If anything, I'd say its just a means to make a quick, dirty, buck.

  27. Misleading article subject line... by mh101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I just read the article, and I don't think the title of this posting should be "AOL to charge senders for incoming mail" but "AOL to charge senders to ensure email don't get flagged as spam."

    From the looks of it, I could still send an email to a friend with an AOL address and not get charged for it. However... any any images linked to would be blocked, and links within the email would be 'non-clickable' unless you sign up for AOL's program. And the poster makes it sound like it's an expensive deal - the article mentions several times that the fee is "a fraction of a cent per email." Doesn't mention whether or not there's a hefty signup fee or not...

    --
    Duct tape is like the Force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together.
    1. Re:Misleading article subject line... by Samrobb · · Score: 3, Funny
      I just read the article, and I don't think the title of this posting should be "AOL to charge senders for incoming mail" but "AOL to charge senders to ensure email don't get flagged as spam."

      <voice style='Godfather'>
      "That's a classy email you have there. Real nice, you know? It would be a... shame... if anything were to happen to it."
      </voice>

      --
      "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
    2. Re:Misleading article subject line... by alexatrit · · Score: 1

      According to Goodmail's qualifications there's a non-refundable $399 fee to apply (which is slashed to $199 for the time being). Very gratious of them, on top of the per-message fee.

      --

      Nothing but the finest in meaningless drivel
  28. First Usenet, by harmonica · · Score: 1

    now mail, what will they drop next? The Web? Bah, all overrated anyway.

  29. gmail by dan14807 · · Score: 1

    AOLers: Just get a gmail account, and a better ISP.

  30. I Don't ... by Walker2323 · · Score: 0

    ...Have anything constructive to say. Just one big "WTF!?!?" Hahahahahahahahaha! You have to be kidding me!

  31. Re: by silverf0x · · Score: 1

    A-O-What?

  32. Solving the AOL Subscriber Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somebody in AOL needs a good spanking for this stupid idea! Right on their bare bottom.

  33. Dealing with AOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I don't know if you have ever had to deal with AOL's "Client TOS Notification" e-mails that they send to mailing list providers. Almost completely worthless.

    AOL tries to strip out the actuall AOL users address from the forwarded e-mail they send you. By removing the user from the forwarded e-mail your left to your own to figure out what AOL user wants off.

    I've about given up with AOL users that won't opt-out or unsubscribe from lists they signed up for.

  34. Huh? by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    Don't most people pay to recive email? Or at least use an advertizement supported system that pays for the bandwidth, etc.

    This would be a great idea if there were some sort of simple way for people to add mailing lists that they want to be on to the system, and an easy way for people to disable mailing lists that they get on accidentaly, or are sick of. So many people get on 'mailing lists' that they don't really ever subscribe to.

    Anyway.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Huh? by danidude · · Score: 1

      Don't most people pay to recive email?

      Well, I don't. I use gmail.

      --
      - no sig.
    2. Re:Huh? by bubkus_jones · · Score: 1

      Which uses ads to pay for the bandwidth, unless you block them.

  35. Bullshit by Wapiti-eater · · Score: 3, Insightful

    All I can do is block any and all AOL origionated connections from any I-net resource I have influence over. That's now done - and should've been done long ago. AOL is a product unto itself. The internet is something all together different.

    The I-net is dividing into two classes. Those that use it and those that're used by it. I refuse to further facilitate and/or enable the continued abuse of the 'not yet educated'. Instead I vow to support, educate and lead 'n00bs' into effective and responsable participation and membership in this world wide community.

    Yea, even if it's *just* helping my neighbor get Firefox installed - every bit helps. Hell, at least I got him OFF of AOL and onto a local ISP that provides a real I-net experience (FF was just the begining). The Internet is not a shopping mall packaged and pablum loaded empty calory gorging of other's sweet waste. That's AOL - an empty, but well packaged product leeching off of the reality and efforts of the Internet and it's citizens - and making a mockery (and profit) of it.

    Spam needs to be faught, but like so many social ills, it's a symptom of a larger, not an intrinsic 'evil' in itself. The problem is blatant comercialisation. The same economic drive that's turned television into a mindless, soal robbing robotic eye into a two dimensional fantasy.

    But this stupid and greedy decisioin on AOL's part is an attempt to grasp and retain power over the infrastructure. By sheer mass, an attempt to turn a profit over what many consider a basic human communication. Mmm, maybe we need an Open Internet....

    Anyone who buys into the idea that this is some kind of alturistic manouver for the good of all needs to return their Willy Wanka bars. The freak'n elevator was a special effect and you ain't gonna see no Munchkins - no matter what the wrappers say.

    --
    Senior NCO in the fight against entropy. I've seen things, man. Things no one should have to see.....
    1. Re:Bullshit by 4x5 · · Score: 1

      Well put, Free-thinker!

        silo -r /boot/etc/ "Buggy old PROM.."

    2. Re:Bullshit by lpontiac · · Score: 1
      Yea, even if it's *just* helping my neighbor get Firefox installed - every bit helps.
      Ironic. (You remember who bankrolled Mozilla, right?)
  36. Did you get that? by alex_guy_CA · · Score: 1

    I read TFA. (OK, I read the first 1/3 and skimmed the rest.) I never saw a mention of money. How much is this going to cost? And it seems like it's just talking about large volume senders, not people who send a few at a time. Is that what you got too?

    1. Re:Did you get that? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1



            Check http://www.goodmailsystems.com/. It's a $199.00 application fee, until July 2006, when it goes up to $399.00. There's no mention on the per-message costs, or at least I didn't manage to find them.

          It's pretty much for anyone who runs a mail server. It's more for us administrators, not the end users.

          For me, I need to do the application, and pay the per-message rate. Since our mail servers are used for our staff, the per-message rate will need to be absorbed by the company. We can't pass the cost on to the users.

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  37. Isn't this like the virus calling the trojan dange by thpdg · · Score: 1

    In other news, the rest of the Internet has started charging AOL for every SPAM email that appears to come from an @aol.com address, as well as for every spread of a virus from an unpatched AOL customer, allowed to browse the web without a parent nearby.

    --

    -Patrick

    "They never stop thinking about new ways to harm our country and our people, and neither do we."

  38. Taps now or later? by Allnighterking · · Score: 1

    Sorry to the younger slashdotters here but I've also got a song from the Doors in my head with the line "This is the end, my friend the end," Sorry but at this point in time I'm willing to put money on the Vegas odds that the internet will no longer be a viable business or personal tool by 2008.

    I'm also will to bet that the only ones willing to pay the certification fee will be spammers. Others don't have enough volume to justify it.

    --

    I'm sorry, I'm to tired to be witty at the moment so this message will have to do.

    1. Re:Taps now or later? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true, the end is coming -- and this isn't limited to the Internet in general.

      The entire personal computing revolution which we have thus far lived through has been no more than technology outpacing bureaucracy.

      Well, bureaucracy (greed) has caught up.

      "Trusted computing" is an example. This is an example. It will only continue.. and get worse and worse.

      My generation -- (I'm 22) -- is, in my humble opinion, the luckiest generation to have ever lived.

      We were given uninhibited access to the largest collection of information ever amassed in the history of mankind.

      We were raised on computers, we were given free reign to the World Wide Web from its popular beginning until its eventual death.

      We weren't part of the elder masses unable to adopt the change. We were of a young enough age to have grown up with this technology, literally. Since its' conception, we have matured enough, both intellectually and emotionally, to truly appreciate its value.

      We are the first, and will (likely) be the last.

      Smoke 'em while you got 'em, ladies and gentleman.

  39. Forget AOL E-mail. Go Bluebottle! by WindozeSux · · Score: 1

    I have to say that Bluebottle is the best free email service ever. It has better spam control than AOL. Only allowed senders can send you mail; anything by anyone else resides in the pending box.

    Anyway this doesn't make much sense(TFA), then again, who uses AOL?

    --
    Fallout 3 will suck.
    1. Re:Forget AOL E-mail. Go Bluebottle! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I'm sure your free email service that you're shamelessly advertising on Slashdot is exactly the kind of service that the average AOL user would replace their AOL service with.

    2. Re:Forget AOL E-mail. Go Bluebottle! by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      You Personally advocate a

      (x) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      ( ) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      ( ) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      ( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      (x) Users of email will not put up with it
      ( ) Microsoft will not put up with it
      ( ) The police will not put up with it
      ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      ( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      ( ) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      ( ) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      ( ) Asshats
      ( ) Jurisdictional problems
      ( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      ( ) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      ( ) Extreme profitability of spam
      (x) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      ( ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      (x) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      (x) Whitelists suck
      ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      ( ) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      (x) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    3. Re:Forget AOL E-mail. Go Bluebottle! by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      I'm not interested in a whitelist-only system. I just received an e-mail from a new client about some work he'd like me to do on Monday; I had never received e-mail from this person before, and I certainly would not want it to have been mixed in with all my spam. Fortunately, my spam filtering works better than that.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  40. My goodness.... by 4x5 · · Score: 1


      AOL has just single-handedly turned the "ISP for dummies" into the "ISP for the rich and trendy".
        So on top of seemingly first-rate customer service, Dutifully high prices (compared to modern broadband) and a limitless supply of "limited access". I have to pay more for my laptop running Debian because they have to put a 56k winmodem in it.

          "Why does a flashlight need 4 D-cell batteries, they must have an agreement with acme battery co. and general light bulb company..."

  41. Wrong Step in the Right Direction by JonathanR · · Score: 1

    This is a misguided step in the right direction. The cost of email needs to be bourne by the sender.

    I believe there needs to be a new mail paradigm, in which the mail stays on the senders server until collected by the recipients. This would serve two purposes. Firstly, it would help return at least part of the cost burdon to the sender. Secondly, it would help somewhat in identifying the sender, as the sender has to keep a server live till the recipient collects the mail.

    Just my $0.02 stamp worth.

    1. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by Baricom · · Score: 1

      That's a fascinating idea I haven't heard before. Let me think it through a second.

      How are recipients notified about an e-mail? Does the sending server push them a message? If so, what's in it? Just the recipient, or a full header? Since most spam filters are designed to consider the entire message, does not having it hinder our ability to filter out spam? Will big companies adopt it?

      This idea has merit. Let's see where we can take it.

    2. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      You Personally advocate a

      (x) technical ( ) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      ( ) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      (x) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      (x) Users of email will not put up with it
      (x) Microsoft will not put up with it
      (x) The police will not put up with it
      (x) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      (x) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      ( ) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) Asshats
      ( ) Jurisdictional problems
      ( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      (x) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      (x) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      (x) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      (x) Extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      ( ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      ( ) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      ( ) Whitelists suck
      ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      (x) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    3. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by oldwolf13 · · Score: 1

      ok man..
      we got it... it was humorous the first 10 times but it's getting old fast.

      --
      If I can't smoke and swear I'm fucked.
    4. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      Obviously the senders server will have to issue some notification to the recipient. This notification can include info such as subject, sender id, attachment filenames & sizes etc and maybe the first few characters of the message.

      If the recipient wishes to read it, then the client app downloads it from the server. If the recipient doesn't wish to read it, then the file languishes on the senders server, taking up file storage space at the senders end.

      Of course for multi-recipent emails, there is only one copy, but it can't be deleted until all the recipients have downloaded it. Obviously there would have to be a reasonable sunset/time-out/life for the file.

      This means that spammers would effectively have their mail server slashdotted if all the recipients connect to collect their mail.

    5. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by flynns · · Score: 1

      See, though, that's the point. It's all been said before. We've all hashed over this. Spam isn't going anywhere. We're not going to stop it. All we can do is client-side filtering and pray for the best.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    6. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by Baricom · · Score: 1

      This means that spammers would effectively have their mail server slashdotted if all the recipients connect to collect their mail.

      Well, the problem is that the "spammer's mail server" is actually some poor schmuck on cable or DSL. Slashdotting that person's broadband connection will stop that node's e-mail and possibly teach the owner a lesson, but the spammer has a virtually infinite supply of Windows machines to infect and host his spam from.

      Additionally, I don't open spam message bodies - I can tell from the subject line and author whether a message is legitimate or not. If there's a lot of other people like me, nothing's really changed. The spammer gets his message out to the interested idiots, and he makes his sale.

      Meanwhile, mailing list owners are in a bit of a bind because they need to scale their system to the point that they have enough bandwidth and CPU power to support their list. Should every medium-sized mailing list have to invest in a cluster to send messages?

      For these reasons, I don't think it's going to stop spam, although it might shift some of the cost away from receiving ISPs and users (especially those on dial-up).

      If you do pursue it, I'd think you could build it very easily on top of SMTP. All you'd really need to do is add a new header identifying the message as a "detached address label", and a standardized message in the body that provides a URL to visit. If you're using a client that supports the protocol, it'll seamlessly pull the message from the origination server, otherwise it'll give you a URL that you can use to retrieve the message. ISPs can filter messages that have the wrong standardized body, and discard them as spam.

    7. Re:Wrong Step in the Right Direction by JonathanR · · Score: 1

      Interesting comments.

      On the note of zombies on cable/DSL: Would a spammer bother using a (possibly flaky) zombie to send spam? The machine would have to remain live and reliable for perhaps a 24 hour period to deliver the mail to all the recipients. This is far different from using a zombie to fire off one email to a few tens of thousand addresses, isn't it?

      And your comment on mailing lists. With the new paradigm I see ISP's role as hosting the email. Mailing lists in this mode are surely less of a burden on ISP servers than spam already is? Also, if an ISP has invested heavily in their mail cluster, then they are likely going to be vigilant in protecting it from hosting spam. If an ISP gets used for spam, then it, in theory, could be blacklisted, and impact their customers ability to send email. This is a big incentive to play by the rules.

      Regarding your second paragraph, the idea is that raising the costs/hurdles for sending spam will slow the production of spam. If someone is really desperate to send spam, sure they will find a way, but it will cost them a load of time (maintaining a zombie network) or money (hosting their own mail servers)

      I see some security issues though, like a mechanism preventing interception/downloading of other users mail. You'd be a bit pissed off if you missed out on that offer of $10M from Nigeria, just because someone with a packet sniffer decided to download your mail for you...

  42. "NOTICE TO MY CUSTOMERS" by panxerox · · Score: 1

    Going at the bottom of all my ads: "Since AOL has seen fit to *leave* the email system you will have to use a valid email system to reach me and the vast majority of the internet. Sucks to be you."

    --
    "It's so convenient to have a system where everyone is a criminal" - A. Hitler
    1. Re:"NOTICE TO MY CUSTOMERS" by michaelhood · · Score: 1

      No one who operates a legitimate (profit-turning) business will do anything like you just suggested. Get real.

  43. This makes me laugh, and that's not the half of it by scronline · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ok, first off, every AOL customer I talk to, basically we take away. For several reasons.

    1) things work without all the advertising from US (can't control other sites, but WE aren't hammering them.

    2) We're cheaper

    3) We have better spam and virus filters

    4) We actually CARE about what our customers want

    5) We don't provide worthless tools and pass them off as keeping you safe (this counts against "others" also)

    Perfect example of the last one. I have a system on my bench right now. It was purchased 4 months ago with "AOL protection already installed and setup. Today I found 10 viruses, and about 349 spy/adware items on the system (per adaware scan). Due to the huge amount of CRAP on the system, I may be forced to reload it due to the huge amount of damage done to the system. It could probably be cleaned up, but laborwise....cheaper to backup and reload.

    This isn't the first time either. My shop averages about 3 a week that come in for malware problems that have AOL, SBC, Earthlink, or "others" installed that simply aren't doing their jobs. These are ISP related tools that aren't working. I'm not counting the stuff like spybot or whatever that is purchased that isn't doing it's job either.

    Little things like THIS is only going to tick AOL users off more when they can't get their mailing lists anymore. I have about 200 customers running mailing lists and they are all small and free mailing lists. One of them is a quilting list for pete's sake with like 50 people on it, and 35 of them are on AOL. I expect to see quite a few new customers when AOL pulls this....I'm counting the days.

  44. Replying to a sig by heinousjay · · Score: 2

    DRM 'manages access' in the same way that jail 'manages freedom.'

    You mean it attempts to stop people who are inclined to break the law from hurting those of us who are inclined to be decent human beings? Sounds good, then.

    --
    Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    1. Re:Replying to a sig by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      No, I mean that subjecting everyone to DRM is like putting everyone in jail -- whether they deserve it or not. DRM does not understand copyright law and especially not Fair Use, therefore it will illegally restrict what you can do with your own content.

      If we have DRM, we might as well become communist as well, because the idea of soverign rights to private property becomes meaningless.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  45. Bullshit by imag0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...Until now, a mailing list gets on the AOL whitelist by following good e-mail practices, such as cleaning up dead addresses, making it easy for people to leave mailing lists, and of course not sending any spam...

    Seriously guys, I have a spammer in my datacenter that uses Ironports to send email out across AOL, MSN and other large networks due to agreements allowing commercial email sent from those devices to be automatically whitelisted.

    So, spammers get to buy some boxes and get around (ahem) *spam blocking* and the users whom want to have mailing lists have to *pay* to keep their mailing lists from bouncing all to hell as well.

    Nice.

  46. I'm on several mailing lists by davidwr · · Score: 1

    I join and drop from mailing lists as a matter of course. I'll be damned if I'm going to personally pre-whitelist each one to my personal whitelist, and the senders will NOT pay AOL anything for the privilage of not getting sent to my spamfile.

    What would this mean for me?
    A few missed emails and one more reason to change mail providers.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  47. Why not just use SSL Cert for email instead? by layer3switch · · Score: 1

    from Goodmail System
    http://www.goodmailsystems.com/senders/qualificati ons.php

    CertifiedEmail Charter Sender Program Qualifications

    To prevent fraudulent use of the CertifiedEmail service, all applicants must meet the highest standards for mailing practices. Goodmail's comprehensive accreditation process confirms a sender's identity and sending domains, ensures that a sender's email programs conform to Goodmail's acceptable use policies as well as compliance with anti-spam legislation. Privileges to use the service are established in accordance with a sender's reputation.
    Accreditation Criteria

    In order to meet the strict qualifying criteria, an organization must, among other things:

            * have at least 1 year of business history, as verified by a commercial identity verification service
            * have business headquarters located in the United States or Canada
            * transmit messages from dedicated IP addresses, even if sending email through an email service provider (ESP), and must have at least a 6 month mailing history from that IP
            * have a sending history which indicates that the complaint rates associated with their IP addresses are among the lowest of senders transmitting to Goodmail's ISP partners
            * be able to comply with Goodmail's Acceptable Use and Security Policy and agree to the Token Purchase Agreement

    If you are interested in participating in the CertifiedEmail Charter Program, you must apply for and successfully complete Goodmail's accreditation process. Initially, the Charter Program's enrollment will be restricted to a limited group. It is possible to pass accreditation but be ineligible for the limited charter program. In that case, an organization's accreditation application will be considered when the system is open to broader commercial availability. The Charter Program will be limited to brands that are well regarded by most consumers or small businesses.

    The accreditation application processing fee is regularly $399.00. A special charter price of $199.00 will apply to all applications submitted by July 31, 2006. This fee is non-refundable. Please review the accreditation criteria above before beginning your application.


    Why not enforce usage of SSL Cert for email??? Can it be true that AOL is just that stupid? So AOL actually think that spammers can be detered by using Goodmail? So now, AOL users can only recieved spams from ESP legitimate network spambots and "trusted" network. Soon, AOL users will only be able to send and recieve emails among themselves. AOL will need to change their name to "Among Only Losers" ...

    --
    "Don't let fools fool you. They are the clever ones."
  48. Honestly there's an easier solution... by HerculesMO · · Score: 1

    Charge a $.01 tax on every email sent.

    Yea, it's not ideal... and some companies would be fucked up because of it... but it's the simplest and most effective solution to a spam problem there is.

    How to implement it though... that i'm not sure. :)

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
    1. Re:Honestly there's an easier solution... by Christianfreak · · Score: 1

      Charge a $.01 tax on every email sent.

      *sigh* I've seen this idea go around on slashdot and other places several times. I feel like pointing and laughing but I'll be nice because, yes it would be extremely effective. The problem is while it sounds so simple, it would be impossible to implement.

      You'd have to invent a new protocol that supported adding the tax. Then you'd have to get absolutely everyone to use it. You can't get rid of the old way of doing it because people like free stuff and there's nothing stopping people or companies from simply using existing mail technology. I doubt ISPs are going to exactly be falling over themselves to pay for a new protocol that people in general aren't going to want to switch to. Think about the masses that use the Internet: "You mean I'm going to use a new program and I'm going to have to pay when I send my pictures of my grandkids!?" Not going to happen unless you basically reinvent TCP/IP and all the protocols that run on top of it. Good luck with that :)

    2. Re:Honestly there's an easier solution... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      You Personally advocate a

      ( ) technical (x) legislative (x) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      (x) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      (x) Users of email will not put up with it
      (x) Microsoft will not put up with it
      (x) The police will not put up with it
      (x) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      (x) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      (x) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) Asshats
      (x) Jurisdictional problems
      (x) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      (x) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      (x) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      (x) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      (x) Extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      (x) Technically illiterate politicians
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      ( ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      ( ) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      (x) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      ( ) Whitelists suck
      ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      (x) Sending email should be free
      ( ) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  49. idiotic by ChrisGilliard · · Score: 1

    Until now, a mailing list gets on the AOL whitelist by following good e-mail practices, such as cleaning up dead addresses, making it easy for people to leave mailing lists, and of course not sending any spam. This is all going to be thrown out the window and replaced with the payment of hard currency to Goodmail.

    This policy seems really stupid to me. My buddy who doesn't pay AOL to get his email address recognized will have his email sent to my trash bin, but then some spammer who is profitable enough pay AOL to get his email through will be able to send me as much email as he wants. If I was an AOL customer, I think I'd start only reading my trash folder and ignore my inbox.

    --
    No Sigs!
  50. some exceptions... by CFD339 · · Score: 1

    May have to be some exceptions for Parkinsons because sufferers have such a hard time accurately clicking the unsubscribe buttons, and Alzheimers patiences who subscribe to the same list every day.

    Ok, yes, I'm in a truly insensitive and utterly evil mode. I'll duck now, as I turn off the Karma bonus on this one.

    --
    The problem with quotes on the internet, is that nobody bothers to check their veracity. -- Abraham Lincoln
  51. Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail works!? by kiddailey · · Score: 5, Informative

    Judging from the rash of response, I can see that a good portion of people here either do not have AOL accounts or do not know how HTML mail works in AOL.

    Currently, if you receive a HTML e-mail in the AOL client, any links or images in the message are not displayed. Instead, only the text of the e-mail is displayed, and a "button" at the top of the message window allows the user to turn on images and links in the message.

    What AOL is clearly implementing is a way for "validated" third-parties to pay to have their HTML e-mails sent to AOL users with images and links turned on without requiring the user to take action to see them.

    That's it. Nothing more to see here. Please move along.

  52. one more reason by digitallysick · · Score: 0

    to not use aol!!! what idiot would want this service?? if you can even call it a service

  53. The Shark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AOL has finally Jumped The SHARK.....

    1. Re:The Shark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, jumping the shark has jumped the shark.

  54. What about non-profit organizations? by hamav8tor · · Score: 1

    So what are non-profit or volunteer organizations with mailing lists supposed to do?

  55. If it's opt in then it's not spam. by Naruki · · Score: 0

    If you signed up for it, it is something you want to get. Spam is UNSOLICITED email.

  56. Re:Isn't this like the virus calling the trojan da by CynicalGuy · · Score: 1

    Spam usually doesnt actually come from the person who's name appears in the From line..

  57. The beginning of the end of spam? by RyoShin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's been long postulated on Slashdot, by a multitude of posters, that an effective way to remove spam is by setting up a payment system. The key is to make it easy on those who mail casually, while hurting the spammers.

    The idea is that you send an e-mail, pay a penny. Or even a quarter of a cent. If you receive an e-mail, you would ideally get the entire amount that the sender paid. But, because of how businesses are, you'll likely get 70% of that. Ideally, most users would only have to pop in $5 a month.

    Regardless, this system would make it much harder on spammers. While a user may spend a quarter a week to send e-mails, spammers would be paying tens of thousands of dollars so they can send millions of e-mails. People will actually want to receive spam- the money they receive will more then make up for the mail they send.

    One of two things would happen. Either the spammers, suddenly not making nearly the profit before, would drop out, or people would quiet down about the spammer problem, since it would not only pay for their own e-mail, but earn them a small profit (in fact, people getting mail accounts just to receive spam and earn a few bucks a week could become a problem.)

    Obviously, there would be some problems initially. Opt-in corporate mailing lists, regular mailing lists, notifications, etc. However, with some brainstorming, I'm sure a good plan could be made, removing one of the major hastles of the internet.

    And then all that would be left is Internet Explorer. (And the neocons can entertain themselves with shutting down porn, haha.)

    1. Re:The beginning of the end of spam? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And all those people who don't know their computer is part of an email spamming zombie net get hit with a few thousand dollars worth of email bills at the end of the month?

      At least they would do something to clean up their systems, but dealing with the legal fall out when they try to blame their ISP/Computer retailer/local geek/childrens friends/etc for making their systems vulnerable would cause more trouble than spam itself.

    2. Re:The beginning of the end of spam? by flynns · · Score: 2, Informative

      Y'know, I promised myself I'd never do one of these, but it just makes too much sense. All we can do is pray and filter on the client side. Spam is not goin' nowhere. We're not going to stop it. It's never going to stop making money. So...

      You personally advocate a

      ( ) technical ( ) legislative (x) market-based ( ) vigilante

      approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

      ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
      (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
      (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
      ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
      ( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
      (x) Users of email will not put up with it
      (x) Microsoft will not put up with it
      ( ) The police will not put up with it
      ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
      (x) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
      ( ) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
      ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
      ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

      Specifically, your plan fails to account for

      ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
      (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
      (x) Open relays in foreign countries
      ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
      (x) Asshats
      (x) Jurisdictional problems
      (x) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
      (x) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
      (x) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
      ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
      ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
      (x) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
      ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
      (x) Extreme profitability of spam
      ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
      ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Microsoft
      (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with Yahoo
      (x) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
      ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
      (x) Outlook

      and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

      (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever been shown practical
      ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
      ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
      ( ) Blacklists suck
      ( ) Whitelists suck
      ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
      (x) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
      ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
      ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
      (x) Sending email should be free
      (x) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
      ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
      ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
      ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
      ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
      (x) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

      Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

      (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
      ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a fascist for suggesting it.
      ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your house down!

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    3. Re:The beginning of the end of spam? by IIH · · Score: 1
      The idea is that you send an e-mail, pay a penny. Or even a quarter of a cent. If you receive an e-mail, you would ideally get the entire amount that the sender paid. But, because of how businesses are, you'll likely get 70% of that. Ideally, most users would only have to pop in $5 a month.

      And how would that work if a german user emailed an american friend via a server in the UK? Would they be paying in euro, dollars, or pounds?

      --
      Exigo spamos et dona ferentes
    4. Re:The beginning of the end of spam? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      It's been long postulated on Slashdot, by a multitude of posters, that an effective way to remove spam is by setting up a payment system.

      It's also been long postulated on Slashdot, by a multitude of posters, that the Earth is flat. Stupid ideas don't magically become un-stupid simply because enough people believe in them.

      There are many effective anti-spam measures out there, today, that we can use. I even wrote an article about how I eliminated spam from my system with near-zero risk of false positives. And yet, a major ISP like AOL can only focus on the idea of making spam a profit center.

      From now on, every time an AOL user complains to me about spam, I'm going to tell them that AOL probably got paid for it, and ask them if they got a check for their share of the profit. If they think it's fair to levy a one-sided tax on me for no legitimate reason, then I guess I can play that game, too. Call it "JSG's Gullibility Cuts Both Ways Surcharge".

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:The beginning of the end of spam? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's been long postulated on Slashdot, by a multitude of posters, that an effective way to remove spam is by setting up a payment system.

      ...because it's already worked so well at stopping my (physical) junk mail.

  58. "Goodmail"? 22 years late, I'm afraid. by polveroj · · Score: 1

    I wonder, is it also going mark as plusungood all mail from organizations that don't use proper Newspeak?

  59. Hotmail doing the same? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I think MS hotmail may be doing or moving towards something similar. Email from our Mail server automaticaly always gets classified as junk by hotmail (we don't do mass mailings, spam, or similar, so there is really no good reason for this). After contacting hotmail about this they replied: "Not much we can do, but for a small fee we'll let your emails through". Or, in their words:

    "[...] However, Microsoft accepts e-mail messages that may be allowed to bypass some of Microsoft's filtering technologies from organizations that are approved by the Bonded Sender Program (www.bondedsender.com), powered by Return Path and certified by TRUSTe. [...]"

    1. Re:Hotmail doing the same? by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      It will not be long before incoming mail from hotmail and msn will be auto-junked here unless they pay for filtering all the 419.

      Are those Microsoft guys clueless.... they allow new scammers on their network every day and allow them to start spamming at full rate, with an outsourced abuse desk closing the accounts 2 weeks later. It should be possible to do better than that, but they are not interested.

  60. This could be a good thing by LodCrappo · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Email is not free. We all pay for it when we pay our ISPs. I for one do not want to keep sharing the cost of the spam that all the other poor saps using my isp get every day. I would rather that the people using and benefiting from my ISP's resources paid for them. The first step is to charge the people who actually use up the most of my ISPs resources, and one large consumer is the senders of UCE which contains images. Hmmm.. thats the same exact group that AOL has decided to start charging for access... coincidence? I think it's a great step in the right direction, and I hope more big email providers follow suit.

    Also, I'd just like to say that most of the comments I've read seem to want to crap on this idea just because it comes from AOL, with no valid arguments, just some cute joke. If you ever deal with AOL on a professional level, you'll realize that they actually are a pretty smart group of folks. Sure, they do some annoying things and bring a lot of people onto the internet that maybe shouldn't be there, certainly people who wouldn't be there otherwise. But they aren't stupid, they do understand quite a bit about how the internet works, and I think it is possible for them to have a good idea every now and then.

    --
    -Lod
    1. Re:This could be a good thing by evilviper · · Score: 1
      The first step is to charge the people who actually use up the most of my ISPs resources, and one large consumer is the senders of UCE which contains images.

      So AOL is getting reimbursed for their resources... How about you? Are you getting a cut of that, since AOL is selling your eyeballs and time to this company?

      If you ever deal with AOL on a professional level, you'll realize that they actually are a pretty smart group of folks.

      "Smart" doesn't mean "good" by any stretch. Lots of 'smart' people are evil, self-serving bastards.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  61. They did pay for them by thepotoo · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...they just didn't pay you. They paid the marketing and development guys to make the CD's, they paid for the cost of the CD itself, the shipping charges, and the packaging. Not to mention the programers to make AOL in the first place. And you threw away their hard-paid-for product.
    After all the effort they put into marketing it to you, the least you could have done was install the thing. Geez.

    --
    Obligatory Soundbite Catchphrase
  62. Email lists are useful and good by Al+Dimond · · Score: 4, Insightful

    An ISP can try to give its customers a better experience, it can huff and puff and look tough. But blocking mailing lists won't stop actual spam. Spam is sent out by zombie machines. Random, short-lived little mail servers in random residential IP blocks.

    E-mail lists work in a way that blogs and "yahoo groups" and stuff can't. Let's say I want to receive a newsletter that's sent whenever there's news. Once a week on average, sometimes more, sometimes less. I don't want to have to remember to check a web page all the time to see if there's news. I don't want to check it once weekly and find that they updated on an irregular day earlier in the week for a breaking announcement that I missed. I want that content to be pushed to me so I can read it if it's there as I take my afternoon tea, along with all the other news I read in that way.

    You can go and reinvent the wheel, come up with another way to push content onto your users. If it gets popular enough it will be spammed. And yet there will still be a need to push content. Or maybe you could try something like RSS, if you wanted to install and set up a server that would be hit up every hour by whatever fraction of your users decided to even try "that newfangled RSS thing". Newsgroups are designed for just this purpose, but they of course have their own spam problems and many users don't know how to use them.

    Or maybe AOL should just drop their arrogance, admit that spam is a difficult problem for which they have no better answer than anyone else, and start behaving with a level of responsibility corresponding to the effect they have on the Internet community.

    1. Re:Email lists are useful and good by Perianwyr+Stormcrow · · Score: 1

      Mailing lists are terrible in comparison to RSS. If a dearth of mailing lists forces people to move to RSS... Good.RSS has been around for long enough.

      --

      What we call folk wisdom is often no more than a kind of expedient stupidity.-Edward Abbey

  63. How do you identify GoodMail? by Animats · · Score: 1

    We know how to identify mail sent via Ironport's "Bonded Spammer" program, and put it in a junk folder. Now how do we identify "GoodMail", for similar treatment?

  64. My incoming e-mail will remain free.... by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

    Will yours?

    My Baysean spam filters work just fine, and I literally get 1000s of messages a day.

    If someone tries to charge me to receive e-mail from me, they will no longer enjoy the ability to correspond with me. Yes, I'll include customers in this, too.

    I will not pay 10 cents to send you an e-mail. Get over it, get a real e-mail provider. I might pay 10 cents once to tell you that.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
  65. How about automated forwarding? by shinghei · · Score: 1

    So what if I set up a GMail account which automatically forwards everything to my AOL account? Is AOL going to send Google the bill then?

    1. Re:How about automated forwarding? by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

      Sadly, it sounds reasonable. However, if you set up a Gmail account, why on earth would you forward it to AOL? You've got Gmail.. use it!

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
    2. Re:How about automated forwarding? by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 1

      I think they are just talking about mass mailings. Ie if your message has only one recipient it will probably b4e ok.

  66. crap by jgold03 · · Score: 1

    goodbye Internet (now that pay-per-tier is coming out), goodbye E-mail

    1. Re:crap by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't just to conclusions just yet. The outcome, while it does look depressing from here, isn't set in stone yet. You're forgetting that capitalism is still a democracy: The monopolies won't offer what the people refuse to pay for.

      --
      A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
  67. Am I out of the loop? by Basecamp88 · · Score: 1

    What is this "AOL" you speak of?

  68. Actually, a good idea IMO by Firehed · · Score: 1
    Consider the once vaguely-suggested-and-heavily-opposed concept of an email tax. Now revamp it so it works well. You set a flag that messages without a micropayment attached (a nickel or so, maybe) won't be recieved. But, and here's the kicker, you refund the payment for messages you actually wanted to recieve. Legitimate email is still free. You can now go out of your way to sign up for spam lists, as if they want you to get the messages (which you then locally flag as junk, and don't see them, at least if your filtering is as effective as Thunderbird's), they have to send you a nickel. Your friends and subscriptions keep their nickels. You earn a dollar for every twenty spam messages. Spam then becomes worthless to the senders, as the ROI is negative, and until the point where spam stops, the rest of us make money off of it.

    The only difference here is that AOL is collecting the nickels, not the mail recipient. So it's, of course, corporate greed rather than customer service.

    Maybe on Internet2. Or whatever... once we've all got our $money_qty rfid tags injected into our fingers, after physical currency is eliminated. Of course, the issue crops up when you've got a legitimate mass-mailing. Presumably you'd just blacklist your customers that don't return (or do accept, depending on when the payment is sent). For a small mailing list it's no biggie, but even something like forum notices would get expensive, and it could cost tens of thousands of dollars to send out an issue of Newegg's newsletter, or something to that general effect.

    Still, I honestly think it's a step in the right direction.

    --
    How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
  69. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by art! · · Score: 0
    Quote:

    "Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail works!?"

    Well, this is Slashdot.

    - Three Slashdot members with ID numbers in the low hundreds designed their infrastructure while consulting for them back in 1988, and

    - Six Slashdot members with ID numbers in the mid-thousands sold their companies to them in the 1999 dot-com frenzy, and

    - Untold thousands of members in the hundred-thousand range have actually had an AoL account, just using it as an on-the-road e-mail fix and then cancelling, or because their parents got it bundled with the family PC and had to use it.

    But no, we don't know how AoL email works now, because we haven't had to go upstairs from the basement to fix Mom's computer ever since we gave her a gmail invite.

    *rimshot*

    --
    _________________________ Sigs Kill Bandwidth Dead!
  70. So pass the fees along by mysidia · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Mailing lists that are otherwise free might like to either prevent AOL users altogether, to avoid complaints that come from users if legitimate mail gets marked as junk -- or impose an appropriate subscription fee for AOL users to join, in order to cover the expenses of "Goodmail" status for the list, and the administrative costs related to collecting the fees.

    When AOL users see that they will have to pay to join certain popular mailing lists that are available through other ISPs for free, they may be encouraged to switch to a provider that provides fairer options of classifying potential spam.

  71. Stopping email isn't the goal of Goodmail by SeattleDave · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm not a big fan of this model. Still, it could help some people. Folks have complained that it won't stop companies like MSFT, The Gap, etc., from mailing because they'll have no problem paying for it. However... that's not the purpose of Goodmail. It's to make it so the dredge can't get in and make it so that if you do tell the sender to stop emailing you, after their email has nicely arrived in your inbox, your response will get processed and you'll stop getting their email. With the spammers there's no real or legally binding way to do that. With this model the senders will be easily and accurately identified and the processed of opting out structured and adhered to.

  72. Since no one here seems to have RTFA... by nwbvt · · Score: 3, Informative
    "The folk who will be left in the cold will be those that host free mailing lists - that could be your local church, local voluntary associations, schools, folk who freely manage topical lists of interest etc. These folk won't make back the money because email isn't a revenue stream. They're the only ones who will see any effect."

    First of all, the emails not on this whitelist are not blocked, they merely have any images or links hidden (and while I am not an AO(hel)L user so I cannot know for sure, I'm guessing there is a way for the user to enable them once they have verified that they do indeed want this particular email). Thats the way they currently have it set up, only now it requries senders to go through a lengthy certification process which they have determined is even harder to go through and less effective.

    So no, it will not kill of small free mailing lists.

    --
    Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    1. Re:Since no one here seems to have RTFA... by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      The way I read it, mailing list admins will have to pay this outfit or their messages will be blocked. I don't understand how you're interpreting it. It will kill free mailing lists. Or the top summary for this article is inaccurate. It says the listserv will have to PAY to be whitelisted.

    2. Re:Since no one here seems to have RTFA... by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "Or the top summary for this article is inaccurate"

      You must be new here. Welcome to /. The article summaries are always inaccurate.

      From TFA:

      As part of its e-mail security practices, AOL blocks the display of images and hyperlinks on most high-volume messages, except if senders are on the AOL Enhanced whitelist and maintain very low complaint rates. Beginning today, AOL will also allow senders who have undergone accreditation through Goodmail to display images and hyperlinks by default. Goodmail charges accredited companies a fraction of a cent per message sent.
      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    3. Re:Since no one here seems to have RTFA... by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Maybe this goes to show you how bad the AOL Mail client is. My mail client by default turns off images, but lets you display them if you wish, by clicking on a button.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  73. The worst thing by DavidHOzAu · · Score: 1

    that can be done on the subject of pay-per-use email is covering this news article. Given enough coverage, people will get used to the idea of paying for an email. Then before you know it, we WILL BE paying for an email.

    Desensitisation at its very best.

  74. DoJ Capitulation by javacowboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm sure I'm going to be modded down for being off-topic, but screw it! AOL, MSN and Yahoo! capitulated to the Alberto Gonzales Gestap^H^H^H^H^H^H Department of Justice's fishing expidition for "evidence" to revive its non-existant case for reinstating a 1988 child porn law. These search engines betrayed their customers by handing search results over an unspecified period of time. Yahoo! claims to have "stripped out all identifying information", which is phantom "compromise" since there are many search terms that contain identifying information in the text of the search itself.

    Only Google stood up to this travesty, on the basis that it was legitimately defending its trade secrets.

    I was a moderator for a Yahoo! Canadian politics group, in addition to using Yahoo! Mail, Briefcase, Messenger and Chat. After I found out about the DoJ capitulation, I resolved to boycott all services from all search engines that complied with the subpoenas.

    So AOL can do whatever the hell it wants. It's all irrelevant to me.

    --
    This space left intentionally blank.
  75. Changing the odds by jfengel · · Score: 1

    The idea is that spammers spam only because spam is free.

    My junk folder right now is full of Russian spams. I have no idea what they're selling; I don't speak Russian. But they sent it to me because it cost them literally nothing. It would take only a few people actually responding to the email to make it profitable. Phishing attacks work the same way; they send many emails and don't care about the vast number that don't get through.

    Spammers have to send out millions of messages a day to reach their marks. Even at a tenth of a penny per email, it runs into real money real fast. This should cut out that sort of utterly random, opportunistic spam.

    There are other problems. I run a few mailing lists, and I suppose I can afford to spend a buck or so for each mailing. But really popular lists, like the joke-a-day kind of lists, will have a problem. At that tenth-of-a-penny, 100,000 AOL subscribers will cost you $100. That would be a lot to ask of a free daily service.

    The solution to that, I think, is going to be RSS, where you pull your daily joke rather than have it pushed to you. Or they just live with the risk of not being on the white list. Don't send spam and you won't (hopefully) be blacklisted.

    It also won't stop the spam zombies, who don't necessarily look like a mass mailer; the look like an individual sending out a lot of messages. AOL may be able to recognize those and cut them off, too: "IP address www.xxx.yy.zzz sent 10,000 messages this hour. Let's open one of them up... yep, it's spam. Block all SMTP connections from that address."

    That's tomorrow. Today they're trying to force mass senders to put trivially priced postage stamps on things. Most valid mass-email senders can afford to pay the trivial price; spammers can't. At least that's the idea. It'll be interesting to see if it works.

    1. Re:Changing the odds by bogado · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that all the spam do not come from the same IP. They probably com from thousands, hundred thousands zombie windows machines arround the world. The only one who will pay this tax will be real stores and real business that send you the usual opt-in mails, for instance slashdot or thinkgeek. Spamers already solved the single ip problem a long time ago.

      In fact you ISP, if it has enouth users, can probably fall into this list, imagine that they send thousands of emails per second, if 1% of those are to AOL user it will be sending a rate of give or take 1 email per second to AOL. And very big providers could have peaks with much more emails per second.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

  76. Gmail Invites by ManOfMidnight · · Score: 1

    So.. uh.. Where can a Gmail user go to help these poor lost AOL users with an invite?

    --
    A proud provider of services through the Microsoft Reboot Engineer Certification since 1997!
  77. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by josepuerto · · Score: 1

    ahhh it all makes sense now...

  78. I use it by bxbaser · · Score: 1

    I use it for some non critical business emails.
    Sounds crazy but you can always rely on that email to be the same.
    I have used that email address for the last 13 years and for the 15 bucks a month to not have to worry about customers not contacting me due to email changes its worth it.

    For the posters who are gonna say its because im a clueless newbie,
    I have ran my own freebsd box mailserver ,dns for the last 7 years.

    The same people that spout aol users are lame are the same people that say anyone that doesnt use(insert-- current flavour of linux in favor --here) are lame.

    I dont use aol as my service provider I only use it for non changing email redundancy.

  79. Re:Not so obvious answer... by symbolic · · Score: 1


    AOL may very well have a future if these large providers follow through with their "strategic" plan to tier the internet. I will have no problem moving back to dialup, though probably not with AOL. However, I'm sure others who are interested in stopping this madness may well consider AOL as an option.

  80. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

    Will bulk mailings that didn't used to now end up in the spam folder? Honestly, just not showing images/links right away doesn't sound that bad. It's the default behavior of Thunderbird at least, and I don't really mind. Thunderbird does seem to think a lot of emails are scams though. Like all winning bidder notices from ebay.

  81. The whitelist by lupid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Anyone who isn't on the whitelist will probably not be affected by this. Most servers are not on the whitelist. Getting on it is about as easy as getting Dell or Netgear tech support to send you replacement gold bars in the mail.

    The people this will really affect have servers that simply forward mail. We host commerce sites for people who don't know anything about the internet or what to do with it. They receive mail at their domains, and then we forward it to their AOL accounts, which they actually know how to check. We need to be whitelisted because if we aren't, we get blocked for forwarding any spam that our clients get at their domain accounts.

    The users control what is marked spam, so it's not reasonable to expect them to understand when you tell them repeatedly not to mark messages as junk any goddamn more please.

    Another note: a few months ago, AOL spontaneously started bouncing mails that had UNCLICKABLE URLs in them. So if you typed a URL in plain text, you got bounced. Real funny, I swear.

    Oh, and I'm trademarking "Greenlisting"

  82. Re:Isn't this like the virus calling the trojan da by Reziac · · Score: 1

    I haven't seen a spam (nor a virus) that *actually* came from a real AOL address in 6 or 7 years. The occasional spoof, yeah, but not the real thing.

    And I check the headers, because back when spam truly from somejerk@aol.com was common, AOL was good about yanking abusive accounts (usually within 30 minutes of being reported), which made it worth the effort to get 'em killed.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  83. sure by Dr+Floppy · · Score: 1

    you can spam our users but you have to pay us for the right. And we can continue to ignore the requests of our customers.

  84. Oblig by AgentJJ · · Score: 1

    I don't got mail, I don't got mail, I don't got mail... Yaaaaayyy!

  85. Double-plus-goodmail by n6kuy · · Score: 1

    ... marks email from non-payers as double-plus-ungood?

    --
    If you disagree with me on social issues, then it's pretty clear that you are a narrow-minded bigot.
  86. That's good. What's wrong with you people? by vladkrupin · · Score: 0

    I keep reading these negative responses, and all I can think of is "What's wrong with you, people???"

    Maybe AOL is not approaching the problem quite right, but they are heading in the right direction. The right direction being removing the financial incentive to spam.

    Why does spam work? Because it costs virtually nothing to produce, and you can make a lot of it. So, if AOL were to charge a fraction of a penny per message, what would happen to a spammer that needs to send out a million messages a day just to stay afloat (more to profit)? Ouch! I'd say they won't be able to afford to get onto the whitelist. If you price it just right, legitimate entities will not even notice the fee, while the spammers will hurt. So, in essense, you will acheive the goal - AOL whitelists will be more or less spam-free. Whether they will be of any value is a different question, and that's up to AOL to make sure that they have enough value for their users.

    Of course, the ideal approach would be a combination of the two techniques. Good behavior should still get you on the whitelist for free. But it looks like AOL wants to see if it can meke some $$$ here. And - surprise! - it has the right to do so! I think the results may be a little disappointing for AOL, just because spammers will not want (and will not be able to afford, if the price is set just right) to pay up.

    But the bottom line is this: AOL is totally within their right to do what they are doing, it is not a horribly unethical thing to do (they are not outright blocking "free" mail; instead their are tuning their whitelists, NOT blacklists). And they are heading somewhat in the right direction, albeit a bit awkwardly. Make spam cost, just a little bit, and a lot of it will go away.

    --

    Jobs? Which jobs?
    1. Re:That's good. What's wrong with you people? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      Maybe AOL is not approaching the problem quite right, but they are heading in the right direction. The right direction being removing the financial incentive to spam.
      Indeed. However, the ends do not justify the means. I'd rather deal with spam than have AOL break the Internet with micropayments etc.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  87. Today we will discuss the phenomenon of Deja Vu by Kelson · · Score: 1

    It's very much like the article Microsoft Will Sell Whitelist Services For Hotmail from 2004, and just as misleading. Only the names and headlines have changed.

    Back then, Microsoft was not going to just let anyone who could pony up the cash get their mail sent through to subscribers. And now, AOL isn't going to just let senders pay to get through to AOL recipients.

    In both that case and this one, the mail provider is turning to a third-party accreditation service. That means Goodmail (or in the previous case, Bonded Sender), does its own checking on the senders -- and yes, charges a fee. But in neither case is it a pay-to-spam scheme, and in neither case is it a matter where *not* paying will guarantee that you get dropped in the bit bucket.

  88. Yeah, well it could suck too! by queenb**ch · · Score: 1

    Wait until mailing lists that you want to subscribe to start charging you because they have to pay to send you a email!

    Mind you, I'm fairly well convinced that anyone who's paying $24.95 a month for dial up in this day and age is probably not the sharpest crayola in the box. Since you're obviously too stupid to find one of the $4.95 a month dial up services and save yourself $20, I guess you deserve to pay even more to get your email.

    Come to think of it, it might work out well since the AOL users won't be cluttering up the mailing lists with stupid questions and getting offended when they get an "RTFM" reply.

    2 cents,

    Queen B

    --
    HDGary secures my bank :/
    1. Re:Yeah, well it could suck too! by LodCrappo · · Score: 1
      Wait until mailing lists that you want to subscribe to start charging you because they have to pay to send you a email!

      I don't subscribe to any mailing lists which could generate a large number of customer complaints and contain images in the messages. Therefore none of the mailing lists I am on will be charged by AOL for access. Did you even read the article?

      Mind you, I'm fairly well convinced that anyone who's paying $24.95 a month for dial up in this day and age is probably not the sharpest crayola in the box. Since you're obviously too stupid to find one of the $4.95 a month dial up services and save yourself $20, I guess you deserve to pay even more to get your email.

      I'm not exactly sure what the point is there.. sure there differently priced ISPs, but they all must pay for the bandwidth used up by spam somehow. In case you somehow thought I personally was using AOL or on (shudder) dialup, I am not. I do not however blindly hate those who are or wish them any ill will.

      Come to think of it, it might work out well since the AOL users won't be cluttering up the mailing lists with stupid questions and getting offended when they get an "RTFM" reply.

      2 cents,

      Wasn't worth it.

      --
      -Lod
  89. -1 RTFA by Kelson · · Score: 1

    What's so +2 Insightful about demonstrating that you haven't read the article?

  90. Where do you get this? by typical · · Score: 1

    Where does this form come from? It's well-written, effectively-used, and I see it all the time. Does someone maintain a master somewhere?

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Where do you get this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You copypaste it to your "things I'm gonna post to Slashdot to improve my Karma" directory.

  91. Heh, FINE! by Zambarra · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just got on their "whitelist". They sent me a confirmation email, saying how they will deliver the messages but they do not guarantee the fact that the user is actually going to get them in their Inbox since their junk mail filter is apparently configured based on individual settings.

    Well fuck, if AOL thinks I am going to PAY them in order to reach their "users", AOL is wrong. I will give these users an email account with me. Come to think of it, I'll do that with Verizon's customers too, at least until Verizon learns how to detect spam.

    Goodmail my ass.

    Z

  92. RTFA!!! by xiphoris · · Score: 1

    One of them is a quilting list for pete's sake with like 50 people on it, and 35 of them are on AOL.

    I think you should have read TFA. It is obvious that you did not; the article says that AOL will only be charging volume senders. A mailing list with 35 or even 100 people on it would not qualify as people that this article applies to.

    Slashdot, please keep the FUD to a minimum! :(

  93. frisbees by jcmb · · Score: 1

    Dude, those cd's made great one time frisbees! Until they cracked, but then it was fun to break them!

  94. Never mind... by jack_csk · · Score: 1

    First of all, I'm not an AOL subscriber (and neither do those of my friends who I wish to talk to).
    Yahoo! has already clarified many of my legitimate e-mails as junks, so that make s no big difference. If things are getting worse, I still have my gmail ready.

  95. What's more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am SO sick of these corporations trying to tie up the friggin internet. How many stories about this stuff have there been on Slashdot today? 3?
    "
    Jack Torrance: Wendy, let me explain something to you. Whenever you come in here and interrupt me, you're breaking my concentration. You're distracting me. And it will then take me time to get back to where I was. You understand?

    Wendy Torrance: Yeah.

    Jack Torrance: Now, we're going to make a new rule. When you come in here and you hear me typing [types], or whether you DON'T hear me typing, or whatever the FUCK you hear me doing, when I'm in here, it means that I am working. THAT means don't come in. Now, do you think you can handle that?

    Wendy Torrance: Yeah.

    Jack Torrance: Good. Now why don't you start right now and get the fuck out of here?"

  96. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually your wrong. If your a company and you send many emails to aol customers they will get put in there junkmail.
    We've had to troubleshoot this problem with a lot of our own customers who use aol.

  97. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by kiddailey · · Score: 1

    We've ever experienced that problem and have sent, or helped send many e-mails to AOL contacts over the years. But usually they are highly targeted, double opt-in contacts.

  98. Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by cgenman · · Score: 1

    Why the frack should they change? To please you? You don't like how they access the net?

    Allright Starbuck, here you go.

    1. AOL's login takes too long.
    2. AOL doesn't allow a lot of network traffic through.
    3. AOL users get a lot more spam than everyone else.
    4. AOL kicks for inactivity at random intervals.
    5. AOL slimes your system with adverts and links to partners.
    6. AOL requires you to use their mail system.
    7. AOL's version of I.E. is terrible.
    8. AOL is basically impossible to cancel.
    9. AOL is slower than other dial-up connections. They used to lie about the connection speed, now it is just an issue of overhead.
    10. AOL is now charging senders for incoming messages.
    11. AOL sells its members list to spammers, even going so far as having a preferred spammer program.
    12. AOL's software is buggy and has an annoying habit of crippling computers.
    13. AOL charges more for dial-up than everyone else.

    If you really think they should have DSL, just set them up with DSL and see if they like it. They're not going to change on their own even if they want to. It's up to you now.

    1. Re:Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      1. AOL's login takes too long.
      2. AOL doesn't allow a lot of network traffic through.


      His parents clearly don't care about that.

      3. AOL users get a lot more spam than everyone else.

      Do you have any proof of that? Someone's used my domain name in their fake from: headers, so now I get around a thousand spams and bounces a day, and I know I'm not alone in that. I have trouble believing that AOL customers get "a lot more spam" than that...

      4. AOL kicks for inactivity at random intervals.

      If you're paying for your call and forget to log off, that's a good thing, although I can see how it would be annoying if you weren't actually inactive at the time.

      6. AOL requires you to use their mail system.

      So what? What other mail system would his parents *want* to use, or even know about? Besides which, they can't stop you from using gmail, yahoo, hotmail, etc - I assume you mean that they don't provide pop3 or smtp access. Big deal - most people don't know what they are anyway.

      7. AOL's version of I.E. is terrible.

      As opposed to MS's version? ;-)

      8. AOL is basically impossible to cancel.

      But they don't want to cancel it, so that's immaterial.

      10. AOL is now charging senders for incoming messages.

      I generally find it better to RTFA before trying to comment on it.

      11. AOL sells its members list to spammers, even going so far as having a preferred spammer program.

      Again, do you have any proof of this?

      Bottom line is, they're happy with the service they get, so why are you so keen to see them change it? What does it matter to you?

    2. Re:Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by Fred_A · · Score: 1
      8. AOL is basically impossible to cancel.


      There, you answered your own question. AOL users don't leave AOL because they can't.
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    3. Re:Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by BrynM · · Score: 2, Informative
      But they don't want to cancel it, so that's immaterial.
      Not to conjure it up somehow, but the fun will just wait until they die. When my grandmother died, I had to deal with many a crappy company to get them to stop charging her for things. Death certificates and all, it was a drag and some companies would "lose" the documentation over and over again. Think it'll just go away because they're dead? The coompanies can sue the estate (your inheritance?) to get the money. They can also collect (harass) from next of kin. You'll just cancel the credit cars then? That can take just as long (interest still accrues).

      Again, I hope your grandparents live to be 500, but when anyone gets around the 80s you should be thinking very seriously and often about how things will be handled. I wouldn't wish the ugly ways it can go on anyone.

      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
    4. Re:Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by data64 · · Score: 1

      Think it'll just go away because they're dead? The coompanies can sue the estate (your inheritance?) to get the money. They can also collect (harass) from next of kin.

      And how does switching away from AOL changes this ?
    5. Re:Do you want a full list of why AOL sucks? by BrynM · · Score: 1
      And how does switching away from AOL changes this ?
      It minimizes the hastle. Moving away from companies that you know will be a problem is a big help. We've done that with my other grandmother and I do sleep easier knowing it.
      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
  99. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by kiddailey · · Score: 1

    According to the article, it does not sound like that will be the case. It merely sounds like a way to have images and links on by default.

    I realize that doesn't sound like much, but to an advertiser it is a *huge* deal. Time an again it has been shown that HTML emails garnish a much better click-through (and probably conversion) rate over plain-text messages. And if you can pay a small amount to ensure that the images and links will be seen by the recipient all the better.

    I could be wrong about the end result, but frankly, it seems to me like it would be a bad business decision for AOL to just start dumping non-verified bulk mailings into the the user's spambox. If they did, there's no doubt that people would start complaining about missing e-mail and that would increase the possibility for them to loose more customers themselves.

  100. Why would anyone get AOL ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can get AT+T DSL for $12.99 a month

  101. racketeering? by welshie · · Score: 1

    That's a nice email your list is sending out. It would be a shame it any of it went missing or rejected. You should get it insured. My brother Guiseppe, he runs a insurance firm that specialises in this area.

  102. There's no 'd' in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    privilege __ ACtard

  103. Slashdotters vs. AOLers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For everybody that slams AOL users for being stupid, I recommend that you at least RTFA before posting the absolute bullshit that's showing up in these comments. For God's sake, is reading before posting so damn hard? If you read it, and don't understand it, then go away.

  104. The solution by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    Simply request any AOL e-mail address that registers for your mailinglist to pay a $10 fee to offset costs of mailing to AOL.
    Better yet, send the bill to the AOL billing department or such :P

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  105. Use gmail by wwmedia · · Score: 0

    just use gmail

    no spam

    nice search

    peace of mind knowing google algorithms are reading all ur emals

  106. Not exactly "fine" by qnetter · · Score: 1

    Even under AOL's current whitelist policy, it's not as "fine" as it used to be.

    It used to be true that, once they filtered viruses, whitelisting meant your message would get delivered.

    Today, there are about a half dozen circumstances that cause your mail to be rejected even if you're on the whitelist.

    For example, if your message "contains a URL that is the subject of a number of complaints" your mail will be rejected even if you're whitelisted.

    Unfortunately, AOL has a habit of deciding that some of their hosting competitors's domains are "the subject of a number of complaints" and blocking all sites in the domain.

    One of our lists' mail was blocked because the list-owner's informational site was mentioned in the footer, and was hosted by Yahoo Geocities.

    (And, of course, they don't tell you which particular AOL in your message they object to.)

  107. Hmm.. sounds like what Microsoft wanted 2yrs ago by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 1
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    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
  108. What about personal whitelists? by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

    That's something my (freemail!) provider does and it works pretty well:
    Once you have manually transferred an e-mail by a certain sender from the junk bin to the regular inbox, that sender is on your personal whitelist. In the beginning it is a bit of a hassle, but after a short while all your buddies are cleared.

    --
    C - the footgun of programming languages
  109. Good by esme · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It's about time somebody started charging bulk emailers a small fee per email received. Until we start charging all bulk emailers, we're never going to end spam.

    -Esme

  110. AOL have been blocking our mails for years by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
    AOL have been blocking our mails for years, go on, try it. Run your own SMTP server and try and send a message to an AOL account. Instant bounce. Here's what you get:
    550-The IP address you are using to connect to AOL is either open to

    550-the free relaying of e-mail, is serving as an open proxy, or is a

    550-dynamic (residential) IP address. AOL cannot accept further e-mail

    550-transactions from your server until either your server is closed to

    550-free relaying/proxy, or your ISP removes your IP address from their

    550-list of dynamic IP addresses. For additional information,

    550-please visit http://postmaster.info.aol.com./

    550 Goodbye

    Here is the original story from 2003.

    1. Re:AOL have been blocking our mails for years by Desert+Raven · · Score: 1

      Your point being?

      A *lot* of ISPs block incoming SMTP from residential/dialup/dynamic addresses. I sure as heck do. It cut my spam load by more then 50%, and not a single false-positive yet.

    2. Re:AOL have been blocking our mails for years by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      A *lot* of ISPs block incoming SMTP from residential/dialup/dynamic addresses.

      Really? AOL is the only one that bounces my mails as far as I can tell. The only other place I have issues with is my employers email system, which does the same thing.

  111. craziness by imipak · · Score: 1

    I can't imagine any other ISP giving in to such bullshit, so the end result will be the end of internet email for AOL users. I can't see this doing anything more than speeding up the revolutions, and tightening the circle that AOL is describing around the great plughole at the bottom of the Internet. And I for one shall cheer when they finally collapse, along with other cretinous "pay to play" fools who've never heard of the network effect or Metcalfe's Law. In the words of Pete Doherty: "Fuck 'em."

  112. Turn off unsolicited bulk mail? by SeanDuggan · · Score: 1
    the biggest difference is you can 'turn off' unsolicited bulk mailings from the Post Office. So other than being completely different...yep it's the same ;-)
    Please, tell me more about your methods...

    Only thing is, the "unsolicited" part is probably as tenuous as it is for Email or phone spam. So long as you've had any interaction with the company or any of their subsidiaries...

    --
    This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
    1. Re:Turn off unsolicited bulk mail? by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      After more digging than I had suspected, I'm both right and wrong ;-)

      http://www.usps.com/forms/_pdf/ps1500.pdf

      Shows that you can stop unwanted 'sexual/obscene' mailings, so I suppose it's something but not the end all mass block I seem to remember was available to all bulk mailings.


      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
  113. How is it different from bellsouth ? by drasfr · · Score: 1

    Well, yes, for you, but there are some companies out there that are sending millions of legetimate emails a day...

    I have interviewed for one some time ago. I am completely against spam, and do agree that their business is very legit. The only problem for them I can think of is that they send free daily newsletter to their customers. Their customers EXPECT these newsletters because they are on a very specific topic and are subscribed. From my understanding they are sending over a million emails to AOL addresses a day and growing... They are already on some whitelist from AOL which already complained of the amount of _legetimate_ email they send.

    Now when you think about it. Those emails were signed-in BY the customers and are free. Who should pay? Should it be part of the customer's unlimited package? After all they have free 'unlimited' web surfing and all right? They are already paying for it part of their unlimited subscription package. Why should it be different?

    In what is it different from Bellsouth requiring providers like google to pay for the traffic going to their end users??

  114. Ban all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's all start boycott and ban AOL.
    AOL are clearly evil.
    We ban *.aol.com hostmask from IRC networks, webservers, ftp sites, etc, etc.

    * Connecting to irc.example.org (6667)
    G-lined (Stupid users on stupid ISP's are not welcome)

    On webserver, redirect aol people with *.aol.com to goatse.cx mirror or page that explains that they not welcome because of using AOL.

  115. Isn't this just like the Habus Warrent Mark? by stry_cat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    After RTFA, it sounds like this whole token thing is a lot like the Habus Warrent Mark. I have yet to recieve a legit email with the Habus Warrent Mark. What is to stop spammers from forging a header under the GoodMail system?

  116. paid advertising? by v1 · · Score: 1

    Now correct me if I've missed something here... marketoids spend cash to snail mail me junk because they know there's a warm body at my mailbox. Spammers have less incentive per recipient, but it costs them so much less that it's worth it. (they only need to reach like 1 in 1000 to turn a buck) Now we are going to charge the spammers like a penny to send an email to someone, that they KNOW will get delivered and not junked, and that they KNOW has a warm body at the screen?

    Aren't the spammers holding a champaign party after hearing this great news? This is not going to STOP spamming, it's going to make it WORSE by increasing the spammers' proffit margins.

    If you're going to do this, do it for ANY proposed email to be sent, not just for any that is successfully delivered. That way they will still have to send a billion spams to get any hits, and they will be paying for all of those messags too. THAT will discourage them.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  117. Not at all. by Inoshiro · · Score: 1

    First class mail is a part of the USPS. I do not live in that country. My tax dollars do not go to its government.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  118. Business Reply Mail by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    In the US there are special envelopes which companies send out for this purpose. They're marked "Business Reply Mail" and have an account (actually, permit) number written on them to which the postage is charged.

    Sadly, I've never seen AOL send out one. It's rather amusing though when you get credit card offers, to shove all the junk that's inside the envelope back into the BRM envelope and drop it back in the mailbox. It's not quite as good as being able to send somebody a brick, though.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  119. Why all the AOL hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do any of you actually remember a time when "the Internet" was Usenet, Prodigy, Compuserve, and AOL? They played a major role in bringing AMERICA ONLINE.

    I also fail to see how any of it's competitiors are "cheaper and reasonable" by any stretch of the word. Do you live in Bizarro world, where Comcast doesn't charge $60+ a month and cap your speeds at roughly double the dialup rate? In your world, can any of those $10-12 a month outfits actually connect you and keep you online for more than 20 minutes? I'd also like to know what kind of IQ test your ISP is using because they need to know it doesn't work - the internet is collectively dumber than ever even as AOL is less and less of an enabler.

    I still have an old AOL account I use from time to time.

    And, in the 12 or so years I've used their service, my cost per month has gone up about $7. Comcast on the other hand, which my family's had for not even 3 years, has followed out cable bill's lead (surprise surprise) and shot up almost double that. It's been years since I had to call AOL's customer service, but they'd have a tough time being half as miserable and ineffective as your local cable monopoly. What with modern gaming being so anti-dialup, those pricks ruining CounterStrike or (2nd game here) are on someone else's broadband!

    The only beef I have with AOL? AOL 5 and up have been bloatware and their spam filter doesn't accept Chinese characters (the bulk of my spam).

    1. Re:Why all the AOL hate? by jdcope · · Score: 1

      I also fail to see how any of it's competitiors are "cheaper and reasonable" by any stretch of the word. Do you live in Bizarro world, where Comcast doesn't charge $60+ a month and cap your speeds at roughly double the dialup rate? Hmm... I have 3Mbit Verizon DSL. Checked regularly with DSL Reports, I have the speed I pay for. I get to use the browser I want. I pay $29/mo. AOL can suck it. (And btw, Comcast is $42/mo here in my area.) My first dialup account was AOL back in the early 90s...it was ok, but customer service sucked, and the connection was sketchy at best.

  120. Random Text by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    Spammers do this already. The last few Viagra spams I've looked at (the ones that made it through my own filtering, as well as presumably the ISP's) had random sentences from what seemed to be 19th century English literature tacked to the bottom.

    Othertimes it's just random words, which can be fairly amusing. In fact a blogger wrote a pretty good article on the "Dadaesque beat poetry" of the spammers:
    http://www.markdery.com/archives/blog/invisible_li t/index.html#000055

    Anyway, I assume that most spam filtering uses something a little 'fuzzier' than plain whole-message hashes, becuase there are messages in my GMail Spam folder right now that have these random words added.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  121. Pay to Send by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    I agree. And based on my reading of the article (not the summary, which -- not surprisingly -- sucks), they're not eliminating their whitelists altogether. It seems that right now they have two, a regular whitelist and a commercial whitelist, and it's the commercial whitelist that's being replaced by the pay-to-use service, while the regular whitelist (which is assumedly what you'd use if you were some organization that wanted to run a high-volume listserv) will still be there.

    I've always thought that a workable email system would be one where it cost some very small amount of money to send emails to people who weren't suspecting them, but was free if you and the recipient set up some sort of trust relationship. E.g., if I wanted to email some random person on the net, it would cost me a fraction of a penny. Not very significant. For the majority of my emails, which are to people in my address book, I'd have set up a relationship with them so that it would be free (which might be as easy as sending a message and having them reply to it). The only people who would get hit with big charges are the ones who send a lot of emails out to unique, new address every day. I can't think of too many legitimate places where that happens, or where the legitimate use couldn't be replaced by the recipient first sending an email to the bulk sender first, so a relationship would be created and the fees would be waived. I think in practice this would require a lot more centralized control over the email system than I'd want or be comfortable with, however.

    In general, I don't have any kind of inherent problem with pay-to-send email, as long as it only applies to bulk mail and there's some way to waive the fee when you can demonstrate that the recipient actually wants the emails.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  122. Link to AOL Goodmail signup page? by DamienMcKenna · · Score: 1

    Anyone have a link to AOL's Goodmail signup page? I can't see find it on their site, even under their email guidelines pages. Anyone?

    Damien

  123. what irony by X_Bones · · Score: 1

    All I can do is block any and all AOL origionated connections from any I-net resource I have influence over. That's now done - and should've been done long ago.
    [...]
    --
    I may not agree with what you say, but I'll fight for your right to say it. That dosen't mean anyone has to listen.


    oh, how rich!
    One moment we hear about blocking all AOL users from your resources because of some vaguely-defined problem you have with "consumerism," and in the next we hear about how everyone should be able to express themselves in the manner of their choosing, even though you may not like their message. Double standard much?

    People use AOL because it's easy for them to use, or there's no dial-up alternative where they live, or whatever. Nobody signs up for AOL because they think "hey, I'm an empty-brained corporate sheep; I know which ISP I'll choose!" And if you think you know what's best for everyone (and judging by the tone of your post, I'll bet you do) and take punitive measures against those who don't agree with you... well, in the real world those people are called fanatics, and are generally frowned upon.

  124. Re:Bah. Doesn't anyone here know how AOL Mail work by protoshoggoth · · Score: 1

    Good lord, you're right. That's precisely what the article says, at least. I am amazed (I know I shouldn't be, but whatever, I still am) at the amount of completely baseless ranting and general nonsense I had to read through to get to this post, the one comment so far that actually has a clue. I have mod points but you're already at five--although this warrants something more like "delete everything above this post" (probably to include the incediary and inaccurate text of the Slashdot article itself). What a circus.

  125. Angle brackets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to actually display an angle bracket, use < or >.

  126. Saberhagen's Beserker series reference by cruff · · Score: 1

    I saw "Goodmail" and immediate thought of the term "goodlife" from Fred Saberhagen's Beserker series. For those not familiar with it, goodlife is the term used by the semi-sentient machines out to destroy life in its various forms. A goodlife is a being (usually human) that assists the machines in return for not being exterminated.

    Hence, the "goodmail" that assists AOL in continuing to survive will be allowed into the user's mail boxes, and everything else will be exterminated to the junk folder.

  127. Not a problem by loconet · · Score: 1

    I guess it's time to add "aol.com" as another invalid e-mail string to my many applications.

    --
    [alk]
  128. PHP form which generates it by Benanov · · Score: 1

    http://www.ahbl.org/funny/response1.php

    You can also find it on craphound.com as a txt file, but the php form is very useful. :)

  129. Your post advocates a by rich_r · · Score: 1


    (x) technical ( ) legislative (x) market-based ( ) vigilante

    approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it
    won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular
    idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to
    state before a bad federal law was passed.)

    ( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
    (x) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
    (x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
    ( ) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
    ( ) It will stop spam for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
    (x) Users of email will not put up with it
    (x) Microsoft will not put up with it
    ( ) The police will not put up with it
    ( ) Requires too much cooperation from spammers
    ( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
    (x) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate
    potential employers
    ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
    ( ) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

    Specifically, your plan fails to account for

    ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
    (x) Lack of centrally controlling authority for email
    ( ) Open relays in foreign countries
    ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email
    addresses
    ( ) Asshats
    ( ) Jurisdictional problems
    (x) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
    ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
    ( ) Huge existing software investment in SMTP
    ( ) Susceptibility of protocols other than SMTP to attack
    ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
    ( ) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
    ( ) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
    (x) Extreme profitability of spam
    ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
    ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
    (x) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with
    spammers
    (x ) Dishonesty on the part of spammers themselves
    ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
    ( ) Outlook

    and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

    (x) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever
    been shown practical
    ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
    ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
    ( ) Blacklists suck
    (x) Whitelists suck
    ( ) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
    (x) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
    ( ) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
    ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
    (x) Sending email should be free
    (x) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
    ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
    ( ) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
    ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
    ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
    ( ) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

    Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

    (x) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
    ( ) This is a stupid idea, and you're a stupid person for suggesting
    it.
    ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn
    your
    house down!

  130. It's a great idea and here's a tweak by goombah99 · · Score: 1

    I think this is a great idea. Until it's unversally adopted however the AOL users will pay a steep price unfortunately.
    But if this could be implemented universally and transparently. Say for example each month my outbound e-mail bill is incremented by a bit to pay for my sent e-mails it would kill spam dead. Sure there would still be spam from zombies but then those idiots would stop after the first monthly bill.

    Even better would be a reciprocal system whereby if I read an e-mail other than the content then I refund the cost to the sender. that way legitimate senders are rarely charged. Specualtive sendors who try to send me welcome information are charged sometimes, and spammers or their zombies are charged routinely.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:It's a great idea and here's a tweak by Punk+Walrus · · Score: 1

      1. How will they know forged headers? "Yeah, I am Citibank. Sure. See? I come from citibank.com!"
      2. What happens if you the spammer doesn't pay the bill? How will you charge, say, the Tawainese sites?
      3. How will you keep the sender from charging the customer back, like say, ATM fees do?

      This is all a bad bad idea.

    2. Re:It's a great idea and here's a tweak by goombah99 · · Score: 1

      You seem to be missing the whole point. Your message never gets to the sender unless you pre-pay the postage. Just like the post office. So forge your hearder if you want. You still gotta pay. The rebate system I proposed simply is a means for "good" people not to pay at all.

      --
      Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    3. Re:It's a great idea and here's a tweak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I think you're missing his whole point. "Hey, everyone knows that citibank.com has paid the fees...now I'll forge my header to look like it's from citibank.com". Voila, I no have to pay, 'cause citibank.com already did.

    4. Re:It's a great idea and here's a tweak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your point is that you can't just charge back based on the address. Well one would assume that was obvious. There has to be some sort of micro payment or authentication authority when a message is received for delivery or it goes in the spam box. But this is just another way of saying what has been said: payment or authorization for payment occurs up front with each e-mail

  131. Just... by Cinquero · · Score: 1

    "privilege of reaching AOL subscribers"

    Think about it. Now think again.

    Who cares? ... another totally irrelevant /. post.

  132. Ding by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    You've got bill.

  133. Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by smagruder · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Now, discussion boards and mailing lists will need to purge and actively reject individuals using aol.com addresses. What other choice would operators of such boards and lists have?

    I run a board myself, and I'm now going to have to go through my list of users coming from aol.com (hopefully none or not many) and send out a warning that they will need to change to a different email account associated with their userid before June.

    And... I would have to update the board code to show an error message to new users trying to register with aol.com email addresses.

    Blecch. Why does AOL have to do this? It's like they want to throw up a Great Wall of China between themselves and the rest of the Internet.

    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    1. Re:Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Now, discussion boards and mailing lists will need to purge and actively reject individuals using aol.com addresses. What other choice would operators of such boards and lists have?

      Just don't pay the fee? Tell the users AOL is very unreliable at delivering your mail, so you don't recommend using them?

      Why do you think this is a problem that you need to deal with? Let AOL handle the complaints when people lose email that they want to receive.

    2. Re:Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by smagruder · · Score: 1

      Why? Because I don't want to deal with these complaints or issues *at all*. A preemptive strike is called for here. After all, there are plenty of other email providers out there.

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    3. Re:Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Why? Because I don't want to deal with these complaints or issues *at all*.

      I think that's what I suggested you do: ignore the issue. It's not your problem. Why deal with it?

      A preemptive strike is called for here.

      That may be, but I think you'll find that actually takes more work than ignoring it would. You're the one who said it would be a lot of work to deal with.

    4. Re:Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by smagruder · · Score: 1

      Banning users with these email addresses is easy. Sending out a board message asking everyone to change to different email addresses is easy. Snap, snap, done.

      What's hard(er) is having to work with members who aren't getting emails from the board, drip, drip, drip over a long period of time until I finally decide to do what I state in the first paragraph. :)

      Also, the mere idea of having to pay for access pisses me off to do a ban, and to let everyone know it. I love the word "ban" in cases like this. It's righteous and beautiful. :)

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    5. Re:Rejecting aol.com email addresses... by AOL+Postmaster · · Score: 1

      It is clear that you don't have a good understanding of what was announced and I'd be happy to provide additional information if you need it. Suffice it to say, that AOL is not changing email delivery for you; unless you choose to pay extra for the enhancement. You should continue to receive the same delivery you do today and we will continue to provide 24x7 assistance for anyone having a delivery issue.

  134. Clarification from AOL by zjt · · Score: 2, Informative
    I got this clarification from AOL...
    There is a tremendous amount of misinformation floating around about CertifiedEmail and the implications of such a program. AOL has no plans of terminating the whitelist and your delivery should remain unaffected. We are working diligently to set the record straight and provide the information people need to better understand this program. CertifiedEmail is an enhanced email solution offering detailed reporting, automatically enabled links and images and more.
  135. Let the user decide by tedhiltonhead · · Score: 1

    I think the idea of the service provider determining whose e-mails get displayed how is fundamentally wrong. The user should decide for himself whose images and links he wants to have available, via a "Turn Images On" button, just like all other current e-mail clients. Even if a sender is "legitimate", who's to say I wouldn't want their images off by default?

  136. Sounds like pay-to-spam to me by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 1

    If I were an AOL user, I would demand an option to send mail from anyone that had *paid* to send me mail to 'junk' (or outright refuse it) unless I specifically chose to accept it.

    Similarly, I would demand the right to have mail that I *wanted* to receive to be accepted and delivered normally, regardless of wether the sender had paid AOL.

    Thankfully, the odds of my ever using AOL for email are about the same as George Bush and Jerry Falwell flying to pluto together in a Cessna and getting a date with a pair of alien prostitutes with 6 legs and 2 heads.

  137. The Scourge of the Internet by DoctorDyna · · Score: 2, Insightful
    AOL has always been the scourge of the internet. I always explain it as sort of a handholding experience with new internet users. It's sorta like how people go to Mc Donalds, not nessesarily because they like the burger, but because it's easy.

    Perhaps if they keep enacting dumb ass policies like this one, it might start to affect the user base that makes them so profitable, the people that just don't know any better. If it continues to grow in stupidity, even the stupid will see.

    --
    Windows has more viruses because linux has more virus coders.
  138. Re:Damn. I like Yahoo, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yahoo is only planning to use Goodmail for transactional email.

  139. No they're not by argoff · · Score: 1

    Actually, they're already paying for that to the USPS...

    Unfortunately, most 4th class mail in the US is subsidized by higher prices on first class mail. So chances are, *you* are the one paying to ship all those CD's.

  140. AOL's pretty rough on mailing lists already by billstewart · · Score: 1
    From a mailbox provider standpoint, the main differences between bulk mail sent by a commercial sender, a non-commercial friendly mailing list, and a spammer aren't technical* - they're the extent to which your subscriber will be grumpy if they do or don't receive the mail, and the success rate in contacting the sender about delivery problems. AOL's already aggressively on the side of rejecting mail even if it might not be spam - I see lots of complaints from people on various discussion lists about how their mail is getting silently rejected (there are ways to get it noisily rejected instead, but it's still annoying, and the automated whitelist stuff has a reputation of flakiness.) This will just make it worse for non-commercial mailing lists, where there's no obvious funding model, and extort money from commercial mailing list providers.

    * Ok, for some spammers there _are_ technical differences, and that makes them easier to detect and reject - things like using open relays, or known zombies. But it's the less obvious spammers who are the problem. And some of the technical differences detectable about some spammers, such as running mail servers on home broadband machines, also disproportionately affect Linux users and other people who run real mail systems at home.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:AOL's pretty rough on mailing lists already by Reziac · · Score: 1

      AOL has never been a bastion of email reliability ... frex, for years there were problems with certain blocks of AOL addys where all mail over 20k in size, or with an attachment of ANY size, simply vanished. One of the former maintainers told me that wasn't supposed to happen, and was clearly a bug, but didn't know where the problem could be.

      And like most "protect the users from [whatever] at all costs/ie. protect ourselves from complaints about [whatever]" efforts, they've occasionally gotten right draconian, with predictably shitty results.

      Personally I loathe whitelists, since 1) often as not the receiver never gets a notice, let alone your email, and 2) some people use it as an filter to let them ignore email that, say, reports a bug in some project they do. (I've seen that so many times that now when I encounter a coder using a whitelist, I just assume they're a nutjob, and move on.)

      I *can* see this being utilized well, IF it were confined to known spammers: if a stupid user signs up for spam, have the spammer pay the provider (in this case AOL) who has to deliver their shit. However, one suspects that in fact some bean counter took a gander at how many mailing lists come down the pipe every day, and how many of 'em come from big corporate interests, and decided here was a revenue stream just a-waitin' to be tapped.

      As to spam control, howcum our little BBS's homegrown filter is almost 100% effective (at most one or two spams slip through per year), yet the big commercial spamblockers are not??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  141. Charge for AOL by chappejw · · Score: 1

    One more reason to get Gmail. AOL should change their name to AHOLE. If they do email like they do their accounting you can watch this go down the toilet. After losing 99 BILLION dollars and staying in business, you can bet they want to charge for even looking at their logo. This 99 BILLION dollars was all barely reported in the media as well... http://news.com.com/AOL+loses+Ted+Turner+and+99+bi llion/2100-1023_3-982648.html/ But of course who is the owner of CNN, but AHOLE/Time Warner.

  142. Make great ceiling tiles... by 5of0 · · Score: 1

    Our youth group painted the ceiling black and have a box for the members to put their unwanted CD's. We glue them (shiny side down) on the ceiling in a hexagon pattern, and it makes a nifty mirrory ceiling. Probably 60-75% of the CD's are AOL, and we've found some really cool boxes - from DVD-style to metal tins to even wooden-feeling compressed cardboard boxes. We've got about 400 up there, just 1500 to go...

    --
    You all have Oo.o and Firefox, so get World Wind.
  143. Responding to Inaccurate Information by AOL+Postmaster · · Score: 1

    There is a significant amount of misinformation regarding the topic of AOL, and in this case, CertifiedEmail as provided by Goodmail. AOL announced a partnership with Goodmail in October of 2005 and has been hard at work with the implementation of this new email enhancement.

    AOL maintains a whitelist that is intended to facilitate bulk delivery from legitimate mailers. There is no fee for this service and it is widely available for any legitimate entity that abides by the terms and conditions as posted on the postmaster.aol.com website. There is no intention to make any policy or operational change to the whitelist.

    The enhanced white list (EWL) was developed several years ago to help facilitate image and link rendering for bulk mailers that were on the whitelist and had exceptionally low abuse reporting rates. It is an automated process that is updated automatically and there is no application process; those that qualify get on until they no longer qualify and all others are excluded. This system was expanded numerous times to facilitate other operational objectives and having served those purposes is being strengthened to close the loopholes that lend it to gaming by those that do not meet the criteria previously set. The enhanced whitelist will remain as long as it is operationally beneficial to do so and in the best interest of our customers.

    CertifiedEmail is a new class of email that allows mailers with exceptionally good mailing reputations to go through an accreditation process and when email is authenticated, have that email delivered to the inbox with images and links enabled by default. Additionally, this new class of email would be visually differentiated as such so that customers can recognize the links and images as safe. CertifiedEmail also carries with it a reporting mechanism that reports on successful deliveries providing the mailer with a delivery confirmation in the aggregate. It does not indicate open or read status.

    There seems to be come confusion about the enablement of links and images as well. Enablement of links and images by default refers to a link being clickable without any further effort by the customer. An image refers to the actual image being displayed instead of a placeholder.
    - When we enable links and images by default, links are clickable and images are displayed unless the customer has configured their mail controls to not display them.
    - When we deliver email with links and images disabled, links are non-clickable and placeholders are used instead of the actual image. There are exceptions to this rule; if a user has listed the sender in their address book, the links and images are switched back on. If a user clicks on the "show images and links" command in their mail window, the images and links are switched back on. If a user tries to click on an image or link in the email, they are reminded that images and links are disabled and referred to the command link to enable them.

    Inclusion on the whitelist is optional and only necessary for those that send bulk email (consider several hundred per day as bulk for this topic). If you send bulk email to AOL then you should apply for the whitelist; it is free and relatively quick to get completed. The enhanced whitelist is dynamic and changes daily; it is an operational tool that evolves with changing operational needs of fighting spam. CertifiedEmail might make sense for you if you need some degree of certainty beyond what normal email provides and or your ROI outweighs any implementation costs.

    We do not see this as a replacement for spam fighting; it is an augmentation to identify email from accredited senders with a good mailing reputation for emails that have passed authentication. AOL users have seen a 75% reduction in the amount of spam and we hope to improve upon that further. CertifiedEmail is not intended to make legitimate marketers pay the way for spammers; they are paying in the form of judicial settlements and legal rulings and ja

  144. Tried before - won't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is only the latest attempt to make money from email

    Bill Gates suggeted it in 2003

    http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-5154155.html

    The post office tried it in 2003 and you can't even find "email" on their website now.

    The "hook" to get people to pay is that it will elimnate spam.
    The problem with this "theory" is that we all know that spammers
    would pay to have their spam delivered and AOL and Yahoo would take their money.

    Second, if AOL, Yahoo or Microsoft did profit from delivering email then
    why shouldn't the company it was sent from get their cut?